RESUMEN
Ultraviolet Resonance Raman (UVRR) spectroscopy with excitation at 244 nm was investigated here as a possible useful tool for fast characterization of biopharmaceuticals. Studies were performed on three protein drugs: salmon calcitonin (sCT), starch-peptide conjugate, and transforming growth factor-ß3 (TGF-ß3) adsorbed onto solid granules of tricalcium phosphate (TCP). Secondary structure of sCT was investigated for solutions of 0.5mg/mL up to 200mg/mL, regardless of the turbidity or aggregation states. An increase in ß-sheet content was detected when sCT solutions aggregated. UVRR spectroscopy also detected a small amount of residual organic solvent in a starch-peptide conjugate solution containing only 40 µg/mL of peptide. UVRR spectroscopy was then used to characterize a protein, TGF-ß3, adsorbed onto solid granules of TCP at 50 and 250 µg/cm(3). This study shows that UVRR is suitable to characterize the protein formulations in a broad range of concentrations, in liquid, aggregated, and solid states.