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. 1995 Nov 15;1253(1):69-74.
doi: 10.1016/0167-4838(95)00156-o.

Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopic investigation of protein stability in the lyophilized form

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Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopic investigation of protein stability in the lyophilized form

H R Costantino et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Upon the removal of water, proteins undergo a major, reversible rearrangement of their secondary structure, as revealed by FTIR spectroscopy. We have found herein that for recombinant human albumin (rHA) the extent of this structural change does not depend significantly either on the composition of the aqueous solution prior to lyophilization (protein concentration, pH, and the presence of excipients such as dextran or NaCl) or on the mode of dehydration (lyophilization, spray drying, or rotary evaporation), even though these factors profoundly affect rHA's solid-state stability against moisture-induced aggregation. In all cases, the alpha-helix content of rHA drops from 58% in solution to 25-35% in the dehydrated state, the beta-sheet content rises from 0 to 10-20%, and unordered structures increase from 40% to 50-60%. We have also investigated another model protein, hen egg-white lysozyme, and confirmed that it too undergoes a significant alteration of the secondary structure upon lyophilization. The extent of this structural reorganization has been found to be insensitive to the pH of the aqueous solution prior to lyophilization from pH 1.9 to 5.1, even though the thermal transition temperature (Tm) in aqueous solution over this range varies by 30 degrees C.

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