posted on 2020-06-05, 15:41authored byAnthony Tomlinson, Isidro E. Zarraga, Barthélemy Demeule
Polysorbates
(PS) are commonly used surfactants in biopharmaceutical
protein formulations. However, they are susceptible to a variety of
degradation pathways, including chemical hydrolysis, oxidation, and
enzymatic hydrolysis. Polysorbates are also heterogeneous mixtures,
and it has been observed that the patterns of degradation can be strikingly
different between the different pathways. Polysorbates (PS20 and PS80)
were fractionated, and the fractions were characterized for their
physicochemical properties, such as surface tension, micelle size,
critical micelle concentration (CMC), and agitation protection for
a monoclonal antibody (mAb). This report seeks to use this information
to inform how these properties might change in polysorbates as they
degrade in biopharmaceutical formulations. The physicochemical properties
examined shed light on some of the differences between PS types and
the different chemical components of polysorbates. Differences in
physicochemical properties for fractionated polysorbates could help
inform biopharmaceutical formulations that use PS surfactants. Importantly,
they show that subspecies of PS20 are far more distinct from each
other than those of PS80. Fractions of PS20 showed highly different
critical micelle concentrations and effects on equilibrium surface
tension. These differences, and possibly other untested parameters,
led to vastly different protective effects for a model mAb under agitation
stress. Additionally, the propensity of various PS fractions to form
micelles can impact both polysorbate quantitation measurements, some
of which rely on micellization, and the effective solubility of hydrophobic
compounds (e.g., fatty acids) in the surfactant solution.