Y. Bruce Yu

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Organization: University of Maryland
Department: Fischell Department of Bioengineering
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Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Roberto A. DePaz, Brian Lobo, and Y. Bruce Yu
Analytical Chemistry May 16, 2017 Volume 89(Issue 10) pp:5494-5494
Publication Date(Web):April 25, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.7b00464
Formulation stability is a critical attribute of any protein-based biopharmaceutical drug due to a protein’s inherent tendency to aggregate. Advanced analytical techniques currently used for characterization of protein aggregates are prone to a number of limitations and usually require additional manipulations with the sample, such as dilution, separation, labeling, and use of special cuvettes. In the present work, we compared conventional techniques for the analysis of protein aggregates with a novel approach that employs the water proton transverse relaxation rate R2(1H2O). We explored differences in the sensitivity of conventional techniques, size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), microflow imaging (MFI), and dynamic light scattering (DLS), and water NMR (wNMR) toward the presence of monoclonal antibody aggregates generated by different stresses. We demonstrate that wNMR outperformed SEC, DLS, and MFI in that it was most consistently sensitive to increases in both soluble and insoluble aggregates, including subvisible particles. The simplicity of wNMR, its sensitivity, and possibility of noninvasive measurements are unique advantages that would permit its application for more efficient and higher throughput optimization of protein formulations.
Co-reporter:Yihua Bruce Yu, Marc B. Taraban, Weizhen Wang, Katharine T. Briggs
Trends in Biotechnology 2017 Volume 35, Issue 12(Issue 12) pp:
Publication Date(Web):1 December 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.tibtech.2017.08.010
Biopharmaceuticals and small-molecule drugs have different approval pathways but the same quality control (QC) paradigm, where the quality of released but untested units is inferred from that of tested but destroyed units. This inference-based QC will likely miss rare prerelease defects, and defects emerging after product release. The likelihood for such defects is heightened for biopharmaceuticals due to their complexity, which makes manufacturing errors more likely, and fragility, which makes postrelease damage more likely. To improve biopharmaceutical safety, we suggest transitioning their QC from inference- to verification-based practice by developing inspection technologies that can nondestructively verify the quality of every vial from the point of release to the point of care. One candidate, water proton NMR (wNMR), is briefly discussed.
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Marc B. Taraban and Yihua Bruce Yu  
Chemical Communications 2015 vol. 51(Issue 31) pp:6804-6807
Publication Date(Web):12 Mar 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5CC00741K
It is found that the transverse relaxation rate R2 of the water protons can be used to quantify protein aggregation and surfactant micellization in water. The simplicity and high intensity of the water proton signal enables non-invasive chemical analysis not readily achievable through solute proton signals, such as inspecting finished biologic products.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Li Yu, Yue Feng, Elena V. Jouravleva, Mikhail A. Anisimov, Zhong-Xing Jiang and Y. Bruce Yu  
RSC Advances 2015 vol. 5(Issue 21) pp:16450-16451
Publication Date(Web):04 Feb 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5RA90009C
Correction for ‘Conformational transition of a non-associative fluorinated amphiphile in aqueous solution’ by Marc B. Taraban et al., RSC Adv., 2014, 4, 54565–54575.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban;Huy C. Truong;Yue Feng;Elena V. Jouravleva;Mikhail A. Anisimov;Yihua Bruce Yu
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 2015 Volume 104( Issue 12) pp:4132-4141
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/jps.24633

The need for quality control during the manufacturing and distribution of biopharmaceuticals is becoming increasingly necessary. At present, detecting drug degradation through the monitoring of active factor aggregation is accomplished through “invasive” techniques, such as size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC), and so on. Unfortunately, these analytical methods require sampling the drug by opening the drug container that renders the remaining drug unusable regardless of the outcome of the test. Visual inspection, the current non-invasive quality control method is qualitative and can only detect visible particulates. Thus, it will miss sub-visible protein aggregates. In this paper, human insulin preparations were used to demonstrate that the transverse relaxation rate of water protons R2(1H2O) can serve as a sensitive and reliable indicator to detect and quantify both visible and sub-visible protein aggregates. R2(1H2O) is measured using a wide-bore low-field bench-top NMR instrument with permanent magnets. Such analysis could be carried out without opening the drug container, thus saving a drug for further use. The results suggest a novel, economical, non-destructive in situ analytical technique that allows for on-the-site quantification of protein aggregation in biopharmaceutical products. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 104:4132–4141, 2015

Co-reporter:Y. Feng, M. B. Taraban and Y. B. Yu  
Chemical Communications 2014 vol. 50(Issue 81) pp:12120-12122
Publication Date(Web):21 Aug 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4CC04717F
It is found that hydrogelation of peptides enhances the transverse relaxation rate R2 of water protons but has no effect on the longitudinal relaxation rate R1 and the diffusion coefficient D. The magnitude of water proton R2 enhancement increases linearly with the shear modulus G of hydrogels.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Li Yu, Yue Feng, Elena V. Jouravleva, Mikhail A. Anisimov, Zhong-Xing Jiang and Y. Bruce Yu  
RSC Advances 2014 vol. 4(Issue 97) pp:54565-54575
Publication Date(Web):20 Oct 2014
DOI:10.1039/C4RA09752A
Amphiphiles comprise a hydrophobic moiety and a hydrophilic moiety. A common property of many amphiphiles is to self-associate in aqueous solutions, driven by the need to shield the hydrophobic moiety from water. This feature has been utilized extensively to create various nano-scale architectures from amphiphiles. However, to effectively control amphiphile behavior, one should have the ability to both promote and prevent self-association. Fluorinated amphiphiles are especially prone to self-association, thus presenting a big challenge in developing non-associative amphiphiles. In this work, we solve this challenge by creating steric hindrance to association. The resulting fluorinated asymmetric amphiphile remains monomeric well above its apparent critical micelle concentration and up to its solubility limit, as demonstrated by small-angle X-ray and neutron scattering, dynamic light scattering and NMR diffusometry techniques. Not being able to associate intermolecularly, the amphiphile undergoes an intramolecular conformational transition, akin to protein folding, to wrap its hydrophilic moiety around its hydrophobic fluorocarbon moiety to shield it from water. This work demonstrates that steric hindrance is an effective tool in creating non-associative amphiphiles.
Co-reporter:Laura L. Hyland, Marc B. Taraban and Y. Bruce Yu  
Soft Matter 2013 vol. 9(Issue 43) pp:10218-10228
Publication Date(Web):06 Sep 2013
DOI:10.1039/C3SM51209F
The design and engineering of innovative biopolymer-based biomaterials for a variety of biomedical applications should be based on the understanding of the relationship between their nanoscale structure and mechanical properties. Down the road, such understanding could be fundamental to tune the properties of engineered tissues, extracellular matrices for cell delivery and proliferation/differentiation, etc. In this tutorial review, we attempt to show in what way biomaterial structural data can aid in the understanding of bulk material properties. We begin with some background on common types of biopolymers used in biomaterials research, discuss some typical mechanical testing techniques and then review how others in the field of biomaterials have utilized small-angle scattering for material characterization. Detailed examples are then used to show the full range of possible characterization techniques available for biopolymer-based biomaterials. Future developments in the area of material characterization by small-angle scattering will undoubtedly facilitate the use of structural data to control the kinetics of assembly and final properties of prospective biomaterials.
Co-reporter:Xuyi Yue, Yue Feng, Y. Bruce Yu
Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 2013 Volume 152() pp:173-181
Publication Date(Web):August 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.jfluchem.2013.01.026
A small fluorocarbon dendron that contains nine chemically identical fluorine atoms was covalently conjugated to albumin via a flexible linker. Two versions were made, which differ by 10% in the linker length. Both versions display split 19F signal and much shorter 19F longitudinal relaxation time than their small molecule counterparts. 10% difference in the flexible linker length has negligible impact on the 19F signal.A small fluorocarbon dendron is conjugated to Cys-34 of albumin via a flexible linker to form fluorinated conjugates of albumin.
Co-reporter:Laura L. Hyland, Julianne D. Twomey, Savannah Vogel, Adam H. Hsieh, and Y. Bruce Yu
Biomacromolecules 2013 Volume 14(Issue 2) pp:
Publication Date(Web):December 20, 2012
DOI:10.1021/bm301598g
Oligopeptide hydrogels are emerging as useful matrices for cell culture with commercial products on the market, but L-oligopeptides are labile to proteases. An obvious solution is to create D-oligopeptide hydrogels, which lack enzymatic recognition. However, D-oligopeptide matrices do not support cell growth as well as L-oligopeptide matrices. In addition to chiral interactions, many cellular activities are strongly governed by charge–charge interactions. In this work, the effects of chirality and charge on human mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC) behavior were studied using hydrogels assembled from oppositely charged oligopeptides. It was found that negative charges significantly improved hMSC viability and proliferation in D-oligopeptide gels but had little effect on their interactions with L-oligopeptide gels. This result points to the possibility of using charge and other factors to engineer biomaterials whose chirality is distinct from that of natural biomaterials, but whose performance is close to that of natural biomaterials.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Laura L. Hyland, and Y. Bruce Yu
Biomacromolecules 2013 Volume 14(Issue 9) pp:
Publication Date(Web):July 23, 2013
DOI:10.1021/bm4008309
Enantiomeric biomaterials which are mirror images of each other are characterized by chiral degeneracy—identical structural characteristics and bulk material properties. The addition of another chiral component, d-polysaccharide, has been shown to split such degeneracy and result in two distinct biomaterials. Dynamic oscillatory rheometry and small-angle X-ray scattering demonstrate that the natural biochirality combination of l-peptides and d-polysaccharides assembles faster, has higher elastic moduli (G′), and is structurally more beneficial as opposed to the alternative d-peptide and d-polysaccharide combination. Chemical modifications of the OH-groups in α-d-glucose units in d-polysaccharides weaken such splitting of chiral degeneracy. These findings form a basis to design novel biomaterials and provide additional insight on why proteins and polysaccharides have oppoiste chirality in the biological world.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Yue Feng, Boualem Hammouda, Laura L. Hyland, and Y. Bruce Yu
Chemistry of Materials 2012 Volume 24(Issue 12) pp:2299
Publication Date(Web):May 30, 2012
DOI:10.1021/cm300422q
The origin and the effects of homochirality in the biological world continuously stimulate numerous hypotheses and much debate. This work attempts to look at the biohomochirality issue from a different angle—the mechanical properties of the bulk biomaterial and their relation to nanoscale structures. Using a pair of oppositely charged peptides that co-assemble into hydrogels, we systematically investigated the effect of chirality on the mechanical properties of these hydrogels through different combinations of syndiotactic and isotactic peptides. It was found that homochirality confers mechanical advantage, resulting in a higher elastic modulus and strain yield value. Yet, heterochirality confers kinetic advantage, resulting in faster gelation. Structurally, both homochiral and heterochiral hydrogels are made of fibers interconnected by lappet-like webs, but the homochiral peptide fibers are thicker and denser. These results highlight the possible role of biohomochirality in the evolution and/or natural selection of biomaterials.Keywords: dynamic rheometry; heterochirality; homochirality; hydrogels; mechanical properties; NMR spectroscopy; small-angle neutron scattering; small-angle X-ray scattering;
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Marc Taraban and Y. Bruce Yu  
Soft Matter 2012 vol. 8(Issue 46) pp:11723-11731
Publication Date(Web):27 Sep 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2SM26572A
It is found that the elastic modulus of a peptide hydrogel increases linearly with the logarithm of its ionic strength. This result indicates that the elastic modulus of this class of hydrogels can be tuned by the ionic strength in a highly predictable manner. Small-angle X-ray scattering studies reveal that higher ionic strength leads to thinner but more rigid peptide fibers that are packed more densely. The self-diffusion coefficient of small molecules inside the hydrogel decreases linearly with its ionic strength, but this decrease is mainly a salt effect rather than diffusion barriers imposed by the hydrogel matrix.
Co-reporter:Laura L. Hyl;Marc B. Taraban;Yue Feng;Boualem Hammouda
Biopolymers 2012 Volume 97( Issue 3) pp:177-188
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/bip.21722

Abstract

Biocompatible and biodegradable peptide hydrogels are drawing increasing attention as prospective materials for human soft tissue repair and replacement. To improve the rather unfavorable mechanical properties of our pure peptide hydrogels, in this work we examined the possibility of creating a double hydrogel network. This network was created by means of the coassembly of mutually attractive, but self-repulsive oligopeptides within an already-existing fibrous network formed by the charged, biocompatible polysaccharides chitosan, alginate, and chondroitin. Using dynamic oscillatory rheology experiments, it was found that the coassembly of the peptides within the existing polysaccharide network resulted in a less stiff material as compared to the pure peptide networks (the elastic modulus G′ decreased from 90 to 10 kPa). However, these composite oligopeptide-polysaccharide hydrogels were characterized by a greater resistance to deformation (the yield strain γ grew from 4 to 100%). Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) was used to study the 2D cross-sectional shapes of the fibers, their dimensional characteristics, and the mesh sizes of the fibrous networks. Differences in material structures found with SANS experiments confirmed rheology data, showing that incorporation of the peptides dramatically changed the morphology of the polysaccharide network. The resulting fibers were structurally very similar to those forming the pure peptide networks, but formed less stiff gels because of their markedly greater mesh sizes. Together, these findings suggest an approach for the development of highly deformation-resistant biomaterials. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 97: 177–188, 2012.

Co-reporter:Xuyi Yue, Marc B. Taraban, Laura L. Hyland, and Yihua Bruce Yu
The Journal of Organic Chemistry 2012 Volume 77(Issue 20) pp:8879-8887
Publication Date(Web):October 5, 2012
DOI:10.1021/jo301718y
Making defect-free macromolecules is a challenging issue in chemical synthesis. This challenge is especially pronounced in dendrimer synthesis where exponential growth quickly leads to steric congestion. To overcome this difficulty, proportionate branching in dendrimer growth is proposed. In proportionate branching, both the number and the length of branches increase exponentially but in opposite directions to mimic tree growth. The effectiveness of this strategy is demonstrated through the synthesis of a fluorocarbon dendron containing 243 chemically identical fluorine atoms with a MW of 9082 Da. Monodispersity is confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and small-angle X-ray scattering. Growing different parts proportionately, as nature does, could be a general strategy to achieve defect-free synthesis of macromolecules.
Co-reporter:Zhong-Xing Jiang, Yue Feng and Yihua Bruce Yu  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 25) pp:7233-7235
Publication Date(Web):26 May 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC11150G
A class of potential multi-chromic 19F imaging tracers is made by pairing metal ions with a fluorinated chelator. All fluorinated metal chelates emit a single 19F signal. Paramagnetic metal ions shifted the 19F signal frequency and made the 19F relaxation rates insensitive toward local chemical environment.
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Manfai Lee, Marc Taraban and Y. Bruce Yu  
Chemical Communications 2011 vol. 47(Issue 37) pp:10455-10457
Publication Date(Web):19 Aug 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1CC13943F
A set of four phenylalanine analogues experiences diffusion retardation when transferred from phosphate-buffered saline into a peptide hydrogel of the same pH and ionic strength. The extent of retardation increases linearly with logPoct, their lipophilicity.
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Marc Taraban and Y. Bruce Yu  
Soft Matter 2011 vol. 7(Issue 21) pp:9890-9893
Publication Date(Web):09 Sep 2011
DOI:10.1039/C1SM06389H
It is found that the NMR relaxation rates of diffusants in peptide hydrogels have a linear dependency on the shear modulus of the hydrogels. This finding opens the door for non-invasive and forceless mechanical characterizations of materials and tissues using NMR and MRI.
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Sivakumar Ramachandran, Ignacy Gryczynski, Zygmunt Gryczynski, Jill Trewhella and Yihua Bruce Yu  
Soft Matter 2011 vol. 7(Issue 6) pp:2624-2631
Publication Date(Web):20 Jan 2011
DOI:10.1039/C0SM00919A
The co-assembly of mutually complementary, but self-repulsive oligopeptide pairs into viscoelastic hydrogels has been studied. Oligopeptides of 6, 10, and 14 amino acid residues were used to investigate the effects of peptide chain length on the structural and mechanical properties of the resulting hydrogels. Biophysical characterizations, including dynamic rheometry, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and fluorescence spectroscopy, were used to investigate hydrogelation at the bulk, fiber, and molecular levels, respectively. Upon mixing, the 10-mer peptides and the 14-mer peptides both form hydrogels while the 6-mer peptides do not. SAXS studies point to morphological similarity of the cross-sections of fibers underlying the 10:10 and 14:14 gels. However, fluorescence spectroscopy data suggest tighter packing of the amino acid side chains in the 10:10 fibers. Consistent with this tighter packing, dynamic rheometry data show that the 10:10 gel has much higher elastic modulus than the 14:14-mer (18 kPa vs. 0.1 kPa). Therefore, from the standpoint of mechanical strength, the optimum peptide chain length for this class of oligopeptide-based hydrogels is around 10 amino acid residues.
Co-reporter:Katherine Joyner, Weizhen Wang, Yihua Bruce Yu
Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 2011 Volume 132(Issue 2) pp:114-122
Publication Date(Web):February 2011
DOI:10.1016/j.jfluchem.2010.12.005
The effect of column and eluent fluorination on the retention and separation of non-fluorinated amino acids and proteins in HPLC is investigated. A side-by-side comparison of fluorocarbon column and eluents (F-column and F-eluents) with their hydrocarbon counterparts (H-column and H-eluents) in the separation of a group of 33 analytes, including 30 amino acids and 3 proteins, is conducted. The H-column and the F-column contain the n-C8H17 group and n-C8F17 group, respectively, in their stationary phases. The H-eluents include ethanol (EtOH) and isopropanol (ISP) while the F-eluents include trifluoroethanol (TFE) and hexafluorosopropanol (HFIP). The 2 columns and 4 eluents generated 8 (column, eluent) pairs that produce 264 retention time data points for the 33 analytes. A statistical analysis of the retention time data reveals that although the H-column is better than the F-column in analyte separation and H-eluents are better than F-eluents in analyte retention, the more critical factor is the proper pairing of column with eluent. Among the conditions explored in this project, optimal retention and separation is achieved when the fluorocarbon column is paired with ethanol, even though TFE is the most polar one among the 4 eluents. This result shows fluorocarbon columns have much potential in chromatographic analysis and separation of non-fluorinated amino acids and proteins.Graphical abstractFluorocarbon column and fluorocarbon eluents are compared side-by-side with their hydrocarbon counterparts to extract the effect of column and eluent fluorination on analyte retention and separation. Statistical analyses of retention time data revealed that optimal retention and separation is achieved when the fluorocarbon column is paired with ethanol.Research highlights▶ Fluorocarbon column and eluents are compared with their hydrocarbon counterparts. ▶ Separation of non-fluorinated amino acids and proteins were analyzed. ▶ Proper pairing of columns and eluents is critical for best retention and separation. ▶ Optimal result is achieved when a fluorocarbon column is paired with ethanol.
Co-reporter:Laura L. Hyl;Marc B. Taraban;Boualem Hammouda
Biopolymers 2011 Volume 95( Issue 12) pp:840-851
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/bip.21687

Abstract

Networks made from chitosan and alginate have been utilized as prospective tissue engineering scaffolds due to material biocompatibility and degradability. Calcium (Ca2+) is often added to these networks as a modifier for mechanical strength enhancement. In this work, we examined changes in the bulk material properties of different concentrations of chitosan/alginate mixtures (2, 3, or 5% w/w) upon adding another modifier, chondroitin. We further examined how material properties depend on the order the modifiers, Ca2+ and chondroitin, were added. It was found that the addition of chondroitin significantly increased the mechanical strength of chitosan/alginate networks. Highest elastic moduli were obtained from samples made with mass fractions of 5% chitosan and alginate, modified by chondroitin first and then Ca2+. The elastic moduli in dry and hydrated states were (4.41 ± 0.52) MPa and (0.11 ± 0.01) MPa, respectively. Network porosity and density were slightly dependent on total polysaccharide concentration. Average pore size was slightly larger in samples modified by Ca2+ first and then chondroitin and in samples made with 3% starting mass fractions. Here, small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) was utilized to examine mesh size of the fibrous networks, mass-fractal parameters and average dimensions of the fiber cross-sections prior to freeze-drying. These studies revealed that addition of Ca2+ and chondroitin modifiers increased fiber compactness and thickness, respectively. Together these findings are consistent with improved network mechanical properties of the freeze-dried materials. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Biopolymers 95: 840–851, 2011.

Co-reporter:Nu Xiao, Y. Bruce Yu
Journal of Fluorine Chemistry 2010 Volume 131(Issue 3) pp:439-445
Publication Date(Web):March 2010
DOI:10.1016/j.jfluchem.2009.11.025
Chromatographic conditions for the separation of fluorinated amino acids and oligopeptides from their non-fluorinated counterparts were explored. The separation of six pairs of analytes, including both aromatic and aliphatic fluorocarbons, was investigated at various temperatures using both hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon columns and eluents. Our results show that when hydrocarbon eluents are used, fluorocarbon column provides better separation of fluorinated amino acids or oligopeptides from their non-fluorinated counterparts; when fluorocarbon eluents are used, hydrocarbon column provides better separation of fluorinated amino acids or oligopeptides from their non-fluorinated counterparts. These chromatographic behaviors reflect the fluorophilicity possessed by fluorinated amino acids and oligopeptides.Chromatographic separation of fluorinated amino acids and oligopeptides from their non-fluorinated counterparts were investigated at various temperatures using both hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon eluents and columns. The results show that fluorinated amino acids and oligopeptides demonstrate preference toward fluorocarbon eluents and fluorocarbon column compared to their non-fluorinated counterparts.
Co-reporter:Sivakumar Ramachandran, Marc B. Taraban, Jill Trewhella, Ignacy Gryczynski, Zygmunt Gryczynski and Yihua Bruce Yu
Biomacromolecules 2010 Volume 11(Issue 6) pp:
Publication Date(Web):May 19, 2010
DOI:10.1021/bm100138m
Mutually complementary, self-repulsive oligopeptide pairs were designed to coassemble into viscoelastic hydrogels. Peptide engineering was combined with biophysical techniques to investigate the effects of temperature on the structural and mechanical properties of the resulting hydrogels. Biophysical characterizations, including dynamic rheometry, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and fluorescence spectroscopy, were used to investigate hydrogelation at the bulk, fiber, and molecular levels, respectively. It has been found that temperature has a significant effect on the structure and mechanical properties of peptide-based biomaterials. Oligopeptide fibers assembled at 25 °C are formed faster and are two times thicker, and the resulting material is mechanically seven times stronger than that assembled at 5 °C.
Co-reporter:Y. Bruce Yu
Pharmaceutical Research 2009 Volume 26( Issue 8) pp:1803-1806
Publication Date(Web):2009 August
DOI:10.1007/s11095-009-9913-3
It is pointed out that genotype-based approaches are unlikely to be effective at dose individualization. Delivered dose, which refers to the amount of drug delivered to the point of action to be measured by quantitative imaging techniques, is a drug-centric phenotype that separates pharmacokinetic effects from pharmacodynamic effects. Delivered dose serves as a midway measurable numeric parameter between drug administration and therapy outcome. One potential way to reduce chemotherapy outcome variation is to individualize prescribed drug so that uniform delivered dose is achieved across the patient population.
Co-reporter:Zhong-Xing Jiang Dr.;Xin Liu;Eun-Kee Jeong ;YihuaBruce Yu
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2009 Volume 48( Issue 26) pp:4755-4758
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/anie.200901005
Co-reporter:Zhong-Xing Jiang Dr.;Xin Liu;Eun-Kee Jeong ;YihuaBruce Yu
Angewandte Chemie 2009 Volume 121( Issue 26) pp:4849-4852
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/ange.200901005
Co-reporter:Marc B. Taraban, Huy C. Truong, Yue Feng, Elena V. Jouravleva, ... Yihua Bruce Yu
Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences (December 2015) Volume 104(Issue 12) pp:4132-4141
Publication Date(Web):1 December 2015
DOI:10.1002/jps.24633
The need for quality control during the manufacturing and distribution of biopharmaceuticals is becoming increasingly necessary. At present, detecting drug degradation through the monitoring of active factor aggregation is accomplished through “invasive” techniques, such as size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), analytical ultracentrifugation (AUC), and so on. Unfortunately, these analytical methods require sampling the drug by opening the drug container that renders the remaining drug unusable regardless of the outcome of the test. Visual inspection, the current non-invasive quality control method is qualitative and can only detect visible particulates. Thus, it will miss sub-visible protein aggregates. In this paper, human insulin preparations were used to demonstrate that the transverse relaxation rate of water protons R2(1H2O) can serve as a sensitive and reliable indicator to detect and quantify both visible and sub-visible protein aggregates. R2(1H2O) is measured using a wide-bore low-field bench-top NMR instrument with permanent magnets. Such analysis could be carried out without opening the drug container, thus saving a drug for further use. The results suggest a novel, economical, non-destructive in situ analytical technique that allows for on-the-site quantification of protein aggregation in biopharmaceutical products.
Co-reporter:Stavroula Sofou, Y. Bruce Yu
Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews (15 September 2008) Volume 60(Issue 12) pp:1317-1318
Publication Date(Web):15 September 2008
DOI:10.1016/j.addr.2008.04.004
Co-reporter:Zhong-Xing Jiang, Yue Feng and Yihua Bruce Yu
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 25) pp:NaN7235-7235
Publication Date(Web):2011/05/26
DOI:10.1039/C1CC11150G
A class of potential multi-chromic 19F imaging tracers is made by pairing metal ions with a fluorinated chelator. All fluorinated metal chelates emit a single 19F signal. Paramagnetic metal ions shifted the 19F signal frequency and made the 19F relaxation rates insensitive toward local chemical environment.
Co-reporter:Y. Feng, M. B. Taraban and Y. B. Yu
Chemical Communications 2014 - vol. 50(Issue 81) pp:NaN12122-12122
Publication Date(Web):2014/08/21
DOI:10.1039/C4CC04717F
It is found that hydrogelation of peptides enhances the transverse relaxation rate R2 of water protons but has no effect on the longitudinal relaxation rate R1 and the diffusion coefficient D. The magnitude of water proton R2 enhancement increases linearly with the shear modulus G of hydrogels.
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Marc B. Taraban and Yihua Bruce Yu
Chemical Communications 2015 - vol. 51(Issue 31) pp:NaN6807-6807
Publication Date(Web):2015/03/12
DOI:10.1039/C5CC00741K
It is found that the transverse relaxation rate R2 of the water protons can be used to quantify protein aggregation and surfactant micellization in water. The simplicity and high intensity of the water proton signal enables non-invasive chemical analysis not readily achievable through solute proton signals, such as inspecting finished biologic products.
Co-reporter:Yue Feng, Manfai Lee, Marc Taraban and Y. Bruce Yu
Chemical Communications 2011 - vol. 47(Issue 37) pp:NaN10457-10457
Publication Date(Web):2011/08/19
DOI:10.1039/C1CC13943F
A set of four phenylalanine analogues experiences diffusion retardation when transferred from phosphate-buffered saline into a peptide hydrogel of the same pH and ionic strength. The extent of retardation increases linearly with logPoct, their lipophilicity.
Carbonate (8CI,9CI)