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1.
Anal Chem ; 96(12): 4960-4968, 2024 Mar 26.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38436624

The emergence of complex biological modalities in the biopharmaceutical industry entails a significant expansion of the current analytical toolbox to address the need to deploy meaningful and reliable assays at an unprecedented pace. Size exclusion chromatography (SEC) is an industry standard technique for protein separation and analysis. Some constraints of traditional SEC stem from its restricted ability to resolve complex mixtures and notoriously long run times while also requiring multiple offline separation conditions on different pore size columns to cover a wider molecular size distribution. Two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) is becoming an important tool not only to increase peak capacity but also to tune selectivity in a single online method. Herein, an online 2D-LC framework in which both dimensions utilize SEC columns with different pore sizes is introduced with a goal to increase throughput for biomolecule separation and characterization. In addition to improving the separation of closely related species, this online 2D SEC-SEC approach also facilitated the rapid analysis of protein-based mixtures of a wide molecular size range in a single online experimental run bypassing time-consuming deployment of different offline SEC methods. By coupling the second dimension with multiangle light scattering (MALS) and differential refractive index (dRI) detectors, absolute molecular weights of the separated species were obtained without the use of calibration curves. As illustrated in this report for protein mixtures and vaccine processes, this workflow can be used in scenarios where rapid development and deployment of SEC assays are warranted, enabling bioprocess monitoring, purity assessment, and characterization.


Biological Products , Refractometry , Workflow , Chromatography, Gel , Proteins/analysis
2.
Anal Chim Acta ; 1293: 342178, 2024 Mar 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38331548

The (bio)pharmaceutical industry is rapidly moving towards complex drug modalities that require a commensurate level of analytical enabling technologies that can be deployed at a fast pace. Unsystematic method development and unnecessary manual intervention remain a major barrier towards a more efficient deployment of meaningful analytical assay across emerging modalities. Digitalization and automation are key to streamline method development and enable rapid assay deployment. This review discusses the use of computer-assisted multifactorial chromatographic method development strategies for fast-paced downstream characterization and purification of biopharmaceuticals. Various chromatographic techniques such as reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC), hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC), ion exchange chromatography (IEX), hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC), and supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) are addressed and critically reviewed. The most significant parameters for retention mechanism modelling, as well as mapping the separation landscape for optimal chromatographic selectivity and resolution are also discussed. Furthermore, several computer-assisted approaches for optimization and development of chromatographic methods of therapeutics, including linear, nonlinear, and multifactorial modelling are outlined. Finally, the potential of the chromatographic modelling and computer-assisted optimization strategies are also illustrated, highlighting substantial productivity improvements, and cost savings while accelerating method development, deployment and transfer processes for therapeutic analysis in industrial settings.


Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Computers , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Pharmaceutical Preparations
3.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 416(5): 1269-1279, 2024 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38225399

The development of liquid chromatography UV and mass spectrometry (LC-UV-MS) assays in pharmaceutical analysis is pivotal to improve quality control by providing critical information about drug purity, stability, and presence and identity of byproducts and impurities. Analytical method development of these assays is time-consuming, which often causes it to become a bottle neck in drug development and poses a challenge for process chemists to quickly improve the chemistry. In this study, a systematic and efficient workflow was designed to develop purity assay and purification methods for a wide range of compounds including peptides, proteins, and small molecules with MS-compatible mobile phases (MP) by using automated LC screening instrumentation and in silico modeling tools. Initial LC MPs and chromatography column screening experiments enabled quick identification of conditions which provided the best resolution in the vicinity of the target compounds, which is further optimized using computer-assisted modeling (LC Simulator from ACD/Labs). The experimental retention times were in good agreement with the predicted retention times from LC Simulator (ΔtR < 7%). This workflow presents a practical workflow to significantly expedite the time needed to develop optimized LC-UV-MS methods, allowing for a facile, automatic method optimization and reducing the amount of manual work involved in developing new methods during drug development.


Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Proteins , Workflow , Chromatography, Liquid , Computer Simulation
4.
Anal Chem ; 94(49): 17131-17141, 2022 12 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36441925

The mounting complexity of new modalities in the biopharmaceutical industry entails a commensurate level of analytical innovations to enable the rapid discovery and development of novel therapeutics and vaccines. Hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) has become one of the widely preferred separation techniques for the analysis and purification of biopharmaceuticals under nondenaturing conditions. Inarguably, HIC method development remains very challenging and labor-intensive owing to the numerous factors that are typically optimized by a "hit-or-miss" strategy (e.g., the nature of the salt, stationary phase chemistry, temperature, mobile phase additive, and ionic strength). Herein, we introduce a new HIC method development framework composed of a fully automated multicolumn and multieluent platform coupled with in silico multifactorial simulation and integrated fraction collection for streamlined method screening, optimization, and analytical-scale purification of biopharmaceutical targets. The power and versatility of this workflow are showcased by a wide range of applications including trivial proteins, monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), oxidation variants, and denatured proteins. We also illustrate convenient and rapid HIC method development outcomes from the effective combination of this screening setup with computer-assisted simulations. HIC retention models were built using readily available LC simulator software outlining less than a 5% difference between experimental and simulated retention times with a correlation coefficient of >0.99 for pharmaceutically relevant multicomponent mixtures. In addition, we demonstrate how this approach paves the path for a straightforward identification of first-dimension HIC conditions that are combined with mass spectrometry (MS)-friendly reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) detection in the second dimension (heart-cutting two-dimensional (2D)-HIC-RPLC-diode array detector (DAD)-MS), enabling the analysis and purification of biopharmaceutical targets.


Biological Products , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Chromatography, Reverse-Phase/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Antibodies, Monoclonal/analysis
5.
Anal Chem ; 94(35): 12176-12184, 2022 09 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36001377

Isolation and chemical characterization of target components in fast-paced pharmaceutical laboratories can often be challenging, especially when dealing with mixtures of closely related, possibly unstable species. Traditionally, this process involves intense labor and manual intervention including chromatographic method development and optimization, fraction collection, and drying processes prior to NMR analyses for unambiguous structure elucidation. To circumvent these challenges, a foundational framework for the proper utilization of supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) and deuterated modifiers (CD3OD) in sub/supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is herein introduced. This facilitates a streamlined multicomponent isolation with minimized protic residues, further enabling immediate NMR analysis. In addition to bypassing tedious drying processes and minimizing analyte degradation, this approach (complementary to traditional reversed-phase liquid chromatography, RPLC) delivers highly efficient separations and automated fraction collection using readily available analytical/midscale SFC instrumentation. A series of diverse analytes across a wide spectrum of chemical properties (acid, basic, and neutral), combined with different stationary-phase columns in SFC are investigated using both a protic organic modifier (CH3OH) and its deuterated counterpart (CD3OD). The power of this framework is demonstrated with pharmaceutically relevant applications in the context of target characterization and analysis of complex multicomponent reaction mixtures from modern synthetic chemistry, demonstrating high isolation yields while reducing both the environmental footprint and manual intervention. This workflow enables unambiguous fast-paced structure elucidation on the analytical scale, providing results that are comparable to traditional, but time-consuming, RPLC purification approaches.


Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid , Acids , Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/methods
6.
J Chromatogr A ; 1674: 463094, 2022 Jul 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35609494

Chiral sub/supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) has established itself as one of the preferred techniques for enantioseparations at both analytical and preparative scale. Herein, we introduce a parallel multicolumn SFC screening for automated chiral method development in fast-paced settings. The practicality and speed advantages of this approach are illustrated with parallel screening of a diverse set of chiral molecules across ten columns with five different organic modifiers/CO2 based eluents enabling rapid identification of suitable enantioseparation conditions for accelerated purification of pharmaceutical targets. Rapid delivery turnarounds of pure enantiomers of less than 1 h from screening to target isolation are demonstrated illustrating the power of this approach.


Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/methods , Indicators and Reagents , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Stereoisomerism
7.
Anal Chem ; 94(9): 4065-4071, 2022 03 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35199987

Tandem column liquid chromatography (LC) is a convenient, cost-effective approach to resolve multicomponent mixtures by serially coupling columns on readily available one-dimensional separation systems without specialized user training. Yet, adoption of this technique remains limited, mainly due to the difficulty in identifying optimal selectivity out of many possible tandem column combinations. At this point, method development and optimization require laborious "hit-or-miss" experimentation and "blind" screening when investigating different column selectivity without standard analytes. As a result, many chromatography practitioners end up combining two columns of similar selectivity, limiting the scope and potential of tandem column LC as a mainstay for industrial applications. To circumvent this challenge, we herein introduce a straightforward in silico multifactorial approach as a framework to expediently map the separation landscape across multiple tandem columns (achiral and chiral) and eluent combinations (isocratic and gradient elution) under reversed-phase LC conditions. Retention models were built using commercially available LC simulator software showcasing less than 2% difference between experimental and simulated retention times for analytes of interest in multicomponent pharmaceutical mixtures (e.g., metabolites and cyclic peptides).


Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Pharmaceutical Preparations
8.
Anal Chem ; 94(3): 1804-1812, 2022 01 25.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34931812

Enantioselective chromatography has been the preferred technique for the determination of enantiomeric excess across academia and industry. Although sequential multicolumn enantioselective supercritical fluid chromatography screenings are widespread, access to automated ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) platforms using state-of-the-art small particle size chiral stationary phases (CSPs) is an underdeveloped area. Herein, we introduce a multicolumn UHPLC screening workflow capable of combining 14 columns (packed with sub-2 µm fully porous and sub-3 µm superficially porous particles) with nine mobile phase eluent choices. This automated setup operates under a vast selection of reversed-phase liquid chromatography, hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, polar-organic mode, and polar-ionic mode conditions with minimal manual intervention and high success rate. Examples of highly efficient enantioseparations are illustrated from the integration of chiral screening conditions and computer-assisted modeling. Furthermore, we describe the nuances of in silico method development for chiral separations via second-degree polynomial regression fit using LC simulator (ACD/Labs) software. The retention models were found to be very accurate for chiral resolution of single and multicomponent mixtures of enantiomeric species across different types of CSPs, with differences between experimental and simulated retention times of less than 0.5%. Finally, we illustrate how this approach lays the foundation for a streamlined development of ultrafast enantioseparations applied to high-throughput enantiopurity analysis and its use in the second dimension of two-dimensional liquid chromatography experiments.


Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Chromatography, Liquid , Computer Simulation , Stereoisomerism
9.
Anal Chem ; 93(33): 11532-11539, 2021 08 24.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34375071

Continued adoption of two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) in industrial laboratories will depend on the development of approaches to make method development for 2D-LC more systematic, less tedious, and less reliant on user expertise. In this paper, we build on previous efforts in these directions by describing the use of multifactorial modeling software that can help streamline and simplify the method development process for 2D-LC. Specifically, we have focused on building retention models for second dimension (2D) separations involving variables including gradient time, temperature, organic modifier blending, and buffer concentration using LC simulator (ACD/Labs) software. Multifactorial retention modeling outcomes are illustrated as resolution map planes or cubes that enable straightforward location of 2D conditions that maximize resolution while minimizing analysis time. We also illustrate the practicality of this approach by identifying conditions that yield baseline separation of all compounds co-eluting from a first dimension (1D) separation using a single combination of 2D stationary phase and elution conditions. The multifactorial retention models were found to be very accurate for both the 1D and 2D separations, with differences between experimental and simulated retention times of less than 0.5%. Pharmaceutical applications of this approach for multiple heartcutting 2D-LC were demonstrated using IEC-IEC or achiral RPLC-chiral RPLC for 2D separations of multicomponent mixtures. The framework outlined here should help make 2D-LC method development more systematic and streamline development and optimization for a variety of 2D-LC applications in both industry and academia.


Chromatography, Liquid , Computer Simulation
10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33845343

Recent advances in biomedical and pharmaceutical processes has enabled a notable increase of protein- and peptide-based drug therapies and vaccines that often contain a higher-order structure critical to their efficacy. Hyphenation of chromatographic and spectrometric techniques is at the center of all facets of biopharmaceutical analysis, purification and chemical characterization. Although computer-assisted chromatographic modeling of small molecules has reached a mature stage across the pharmaceutical industry, software-based method optimization approaches for large molecules has yet to see the same revitalization. Conformational changes of biomolecules under chromatographic conditions have been identified as the major culprit in terms of sub-optimal modeling outcomes. In order to circumvent these challenges, we herein investigate the outcomes generated via computer-assisted modeling from using different chaotropic and denaturing mobile phases (trifluoroacetic acid, sodium perchlorate and guanidine hydrochloride in acetonitrile/water-based eluents). Linear and polynomial regression retention models using ACD/Labs software were built as a function of gradient slope, column temperature and mobile phase buffer for eight different model proteins ranging from 12 to 670 kDa (holo-transferrin, cytochrome C, apomyoglobin, ribonuclease A, ribonuclease A type I-A, albumin, y-globulin and thyroglobulin bovine). Correlation between experimental and modeled outputs was substantially improved by using strong chaotropic and denaturing modifiers in the mobile phase, even when using linear regression modeling as typically observed for small molecules. On the contrary, the use of conventional TFA buffer concentrations at low column temperatures required the used of polynomial regression modeling indicating potential conformational structure changes of proteins upon chromatographic conditions. In addition, we illustrate the power of modern computer-assisted chromatography modeling combined with chaotropic agents in the developing of new RPLC assays for protein-based therapeutics and vaccines.

11.
J Chromatogr A ; 1641: 461997, 2021 Mar 29.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33676111

In recent years, the use of quantitative liquid chromatography (LC) coupled charged aerosol detection (CAD) for poor UV absorbing analytes in multicomponent mixtures has grown exponentially across academic and industrial sectors. The ballpark of previous LC-CAD reports is focused on practical applications, as well as optimization of critical parameters such as: response dependencies on temperature, nebulization process, analyte volatility, and mobile-phase composition. However, straightforward approaches to deal with the characteristic nonlinear response of CAD still scarce. A highly overlooked parameter is the power function value (PFV), whose optimization enables a detection signal that is more linear with higher signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) and lower relative standard deviation (RSD) of area counts. Herein, a systematic investigation of different regression models (log-log, first-and second-degree polynomial) by both interpolation and extrapolation process in conjunction with PFV optimization throughout the development of LC-CAD assays is reported. The accuracy of the results via interpolation is always good (< 5%) when operating in the vicinity of the optimum PFV regardless the regression model choice. On the contrary, extrapolation process only worked when applying log-log regression at the optimum PFV (accuracy <5%). This outcome indicates that a first-order regression via interpolation can be a safe and simple choice for quantitative LC-CAD in highly regulated laboratories (GLP, GMP, etc.). Whereas a straightforward extrapolation combined with log-log regression can enable the deployment of high-throughput LC-CAD assays, especially but not limited to laboratories where the synthetic process route is undergoing rapid change and optimization (medicinal chemistry, discovery, biocatalysis, process chemistry, etc.). This approach is crucial in developing quantitative LC-CAD assays for poor UV absorbing pharmaceuticals that are sensitive, precise, accurate and robust across early and late-stage pharmaceutical development.


Aerosols/analysis , Algorithms , Drug Development/methods , Amikacin/analysis , Regression Analysis , Signal-To-Noise Ratio
12.
Anal Chem ; 92(19): 13443-13451, 2020 10 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32786491

Modern pharmaceutical processes can often lead to multicomponent mixtures of closely related species that are difficult to resolve under chromatographic conditions, and even worse in preparative scale settings. Despite recent improvements in column technology and instrumentation, there remains an urgent need for creating innovative approaches that address challenging coelutions of critical pair and poor chromatographic productivity of purification methods. Herein, we overcome these challenges by introducing a simple and practical technique named multifactorial peak crossover (MPC) via computer-assisted chromatographic modeling. The approach outlined here focuses on mapping the separation landscape of pharmaceutical mixtures to quickly identify spaces of peak coelution crossings which enables one to conveniently switch the elution order of target analytes. Diverse examples of MPC diagrams as a function of column temperature, mobile phase gradient or a multifactorial combination in reversed phase and ion exchange chromatography (RPLC and IEC) modes are generated using ACD Laboratories/LC Simulator software and corroborated with experimental data match (overall retention time differences of less than 1%). This powerful MPC technique allows us to gain massive productivity increases (shorter cycle time and higher sample loading) for purification of pharmaceuticals by selectively switching the elution order of target components away from undesired tailing peaks and coelution spaces. MPC chromatography dramatically reduces the time spent developing productive analytical and preparative scale separations. In addition, we illustrate how this new MPC concept can be used to gain substantial improvements of the signal-to-noise ratio, enabling straightforward ppb detection of low-level target components with direct impact in the quantitation of metabolites and potential genotoxic impurities (PGIs). These innovations are of paramount importance in order to facilitate efficient isolation, characterization, and quantitation of drug substances in the development of new medicines.

13.
J Chromatogr A ; 1622: 460895, 2020 Jul 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32408991

Baseline separation and analysis of multicomponent mixtures of closely related pharmaceuticals using single column selectivity can often be challenging, requiring the combination of orthogonal stationary and mobile phase methods to monitor all the species and optimize reaction outcomes. In recent years, two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) has become a valuable tool for improving peak capacity and selectivity. Though powerful, standard 2D-LC instrumentation and software can often lead to tedious method development and has a requirement for very specific expertise that is poorly suited for a fast-paced industrial environment. In this regard, the introduction of an automated online 2D-LC setup that could screen multiple columns in both dimensions without manual intervention will undeniably serve to streamline column/mobile phase selection and secure the viability of 2D-LC as a mainstay instrument for industrial applications. Herein, we introduce and investigate a multicolumn online 2D-LC approach that simplifies column screening and method development dramatically. This setup incorporates 6-position column selection valve technology whose functionality enables us to combine multiple columns in the first and second dimensions. This strategy in conjunction with diode array detection (DAD) in both dimensions and mass spectrometry (MS) acquisition in the second dimension serves to explore different columns and mobile phases as a framework for screening targeted compounds in multicomponent mixtures without having to perform chromatographic purification. Multiple online heart cutting achiral RPLC - achiral RPLC and achiral RPLC - chiral RPLC coupled to DAD and ESI-MS methods combining several stationary phase selectivity in an automated fashion are successfully applied to the separation and analysis of complex mixtures of drug substances, where in many instances, traditional 1D-ultra-high performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) fails or delivers sub-optimal results. This automated online multicolumn 2D-LC workflow enables rapid and efficient identification of column/eluent combinations, as well as sample analysis across multiple columns in both dimensions overnight with a single click.


Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/instrumentation , Online Systems , Pharmaceutical Preparations/chemistry
14.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 412(11): 2655-2663, 2020 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32128644

The analysis of complex mixtures of closely related species is quickly becoming a bottleneck in the development of new drug substances, reflecting the ever-increasing complexity of both fundamental biology and the therapeutics used to treat disease. Two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) is emerging as a powerful tool to achieve substantial improvements in peak capacity and selectivity. However, 2D-LC suffers from several limitations, including the lack of automated multicolumn setups capable of combining multiple columns in both dimensions. Herein, we report an investigation into the development and implementation of a customized online comprehensive multicolumn 2D-LC-DAD-MS setup for screening and method development purposes, as well as analysis of multicomponent biopharmaceutical mixtures. In this study, excellent chromatographic performance in terms of selectivity, peak shape, and reproducibility were achieved by combining reversed-phase (RP), strong cation exchange (SCX), strong anion exchange (SAX), and size exclusion chromatography (SEC) using sub-2-µm columns in the first dimension in conjunction with several 3.0 mm × 50 mm RP columns packed with sub-3-µm fully porous particles in the second dimension. Multiple combinations of separation modes coupled to UV and MS detection are applied to the LC × LC analysis of a protein standard mixture, intended to be representative of protein drug substances. The results reported in this study demonstrate that our automated online multicolumn 2D-LC-DAD-MS workflow can be a powerful tool for comprehensive chromatographic column screening that enables the semi-automated development of 2D-LC methods, offering the ability to streamline full visualization of sample composition for an unknown complex mixture while maximizing chromatographic orthogonality. Graphical Abstract.


Chromatography, Liquid/instrumentation , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/instrumentation , Mass Spectrometry/instrumentation , Chromatography, Gel/instrumentation , Chromatography, Ion Exchange/instrumentation , Chromatography, Reverse-Phase/instrumentation , Drug Discovery/instrumentation , Equipment Design , Pharmaceutical Preparations/analysis , Proteins/analysis , Workflow
15.
Anal Chem ; 91(21): 13907-13915, 2019 11 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31549812

Chromatographic separation, analysis and characterization of complex highly polar analyte mixtures can often be very challenging using conventional separation approaches. Analysis and purification of hydrophilic compounds have been dominated by liquid chromatography (LC) and ion-exchange chromatography (IC), with sub/supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) moving toward these new applications beyond traditional chiral separations. However, the low polarity of supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2) has limited the use of SFC for separation and purification in the bioanalytical space, especially at the preparative scale. Reaction mixtures of highly polar species are strongly retained even using polar additives in alcohol modifier/CO2 based eluents. Herein, we overcome these problems by introducing chaotropic effects in SFC separations using a nontraditional mobile phase mixture consisting of ammonium hydroxide combined with high water concentration in the alcohol modifier and carbon dioxide. The separation mechanism was here elucidated based on extensive IC-CD (IC couple to conductivity detection) analysis of cyclic peptides subjected to the SFC conditions, indicating the in situ formation of a bicarbonate counterion (HCO3-). In contrast to other salts, HCO3- was found to play a crucial role acting as a chaotropic agent that disrupts undesired H-bonding interactions, which was demonstrated by size-exclusion chromatography coupled with differential hydrogen-deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry experiments (SEC-HDX-MS). In addition, the use of NH4OH in water-rich MeOH modifiers was compared to other commonly used basic additives (diethylamine, triethylamine, and isobutylamine) showing unmatched chromatographic and MS detection performance in terms of peak shape, retention, selectivity, and ionization as well as a completely different selectivity and retention behavior. Moreover, relative to ammonium formate and ammonium acetate in water-rich methanol modifier, the ammonium hydroxide in water additive showed better chromatographic performance with enhanced sensitivity. Further optimization of NH4OH and H2O levels in conjunction with MeOH/CO2 served to furnish a generic modifier (0.2% NH4OH, 5% H2O in MeOH) that enables the widespread transition of SFC to domains that were previously considered out of its scope. This approach is extensively applied to the separation, analysis, and purification of multicomponent reaction mixtures of closely related polar pharmaceuticals using readily available SFC instrumentation. The examples described here cover a broad spectrum of bioanalytical and pharmaceutical applications including analytical and preparative chromatography of organohalogenated species, nucleobases, nucleosides, nucleotides, sulfonamides, and cyclic peptides among other highly polar species.


Ammonium Hydroxide/chemistry , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/methods , Peptides/isolation & purification , Pharmaceutical Preparations/isolation & purification , Water/chemistry , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Hydrogen Deuterium Exchange-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Methanol/chemistry
16.
Acc Chem Res ; 52(7): 1990-2002, 2019 07 16.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31198042

Manufacturing process development of new drug substances in the pharmaceutical industry combines numerous chemical challenges beyond the efficient synthesis of complex molecules. Optimization of a synthetic route involves the screening of multiple reaction variables with a desired outcome that not only depends on an increased product yield but is also highly influenced by the removal efficacy of residual chemicals and reaction byproducts during the subsequent synthetic route. Consequently, organic chemists must survey a wide array of synthetic variables to develop a highly productive, green, and cost-effective manufacturing process. The time constraints of developing robust quantitative methods prior to each processing step can easily lead to sample analysis becoming a bottleneck in synthetic route development. In this regard, conventional "on demand" analytical method development and optimization approaches, traditionally used for guiding synthetic chemistry efforts, become unsustainable. This Account introduces recent efforts to address the aforementioned challenges through the development and implementation of generic or more universal chromatographic methods that can cover a broad spectrum of targeted compound classes. Such generic methods require significant resolving power to enable baseline resolution of multicomponent mixtures in a single experimental run without additional method customization but must be simple enough to allow for routine use by chemists, chemical engineers and other researchers with little experience in chromatographic method development. These powerful analytical methodologies are often employed to minimize the time spent developing new analytical assays, while also facilitating method transfer to manufacturing facilities and application in regulatory settings. Diverse examples of universal and fit-for-purpose analytical procedures are presented herein, illustrating the power of modern readily available analytical technology for streamlining the development of new drug substances in organic chemistry laboratories across both academic and industrial sectors. With recent advances in analytical instrumentation and column technologies, universal chromatographic methods are quickly becoming a proactive and effective strategy to accelerate the discovery and implementation of new synthetic methodologies, especially but not limited to laboratories where the synthetic process route is undergoing rapid change and optimization. Targets of these generic methods include analysis of organic solvents, acid and basic additives, nucleotide species, palladium scavengers, impurity mapping, enantiopurity, synthetic intermediates, active pharmaceutical ingredients and their counterions, dehalogenation byproducts, and mixtures of organohalogenated pharmaceuticals, among other chemicals used or formed in process chemistry reactions.


Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Pharmaceutical Research/methods , Antineoplastic Agents/analysis , Drug Contamination/prevention & control , Research
17.
J Chromatogr A ; 1603: 1-7, 2019 Oct 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31196588

In recent years, charged aerosol detection (CAD) has become a valuable tool for fast and efficient quantitative chromatographic analysis of drug substances with weak UV absorption. In analytical method development using CAD, the power function settings available in the instrument software are key for linearization of the signal response with respect to analyte concentration. However, the relatively poor understanding of the power function algorithm has limited a more widespread use of CAD for quantitative assays, especially in the late stage of method validation and GMP laboratories. Herein, we present an approach to understand the inner workings of the power function value (PFV), the PFV optimization algorithm, as well as a method to determine the optimum PFV based on the signals acquired at PFV = 1 (default CAD settings). The exponent and the constant in the PFV equation used for modeling follow a trend as a function of PFV. The CAD signal at any PFV was modeled based on the signal acquired at PFV = 1, the modelling was successful for two analytes at different concentration levels on two different CAD detectors of the same model. This method reveals the functionality of the PFV which substantially simplifies the workflow needed to optimize the detector signal. The accuracy between the experimental and theoretical results showed high correlation and always resulted in the same optimum PFV determined by both ways. The approach described in this investigation simplifies the selection of the optimum PFV at which the signal is more linear, the signal-to-noise is higher, and the area reproducibility is better. The power function algorithm elucidated herein enables determination of optimum PFV from minimal experimental output and excellent overall accuracy. This paper provides an approach that includes no data transformation outside the vendor software, a very important requirement to easily validate and report results in a GMP environment.


Aerosols/analysis , Algorithms , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/instrumentation , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/standards , Pharmaceutical Preparations/analysis , Chemistry, Pharmaceutical , Reproducibility of Results
18.
Analyst ; 144(9): 2872-2880, 2019 Apr 23.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30830135

Modern process research and development can often be hampered by the tedious method development required to chromatographically resolve mixtures of chemical species with very similar physical properties. Herein, we describe a simple approach for the development and implementation of an efficient ultra-high performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) assay that is extensively applied to the separation and analysis of multicomponent reaction mixtures of closely related pharmaceutical intermediates and impurities. Methods are optimized using multi-column and multi-solvent UHPLC screening in conjunction with chromatography simulation software (ACD Labs/LC Simulator). This approach is implemented to enable the separation, identification, mapping and control of impurities formed within the process chemistry optimization of the dimeric catalyst used in the synthesis of new drug substances. The final method utilized a sub-2 µm C18 stationary phase (2.1 mm I.D. × 50 mm length, 1.7 µm particle size ACQUITY UPLC BEH C18) with a non-conventional chaotropic mobile phase buffer (35 mM potassium hexafluorophosphate in 0.1% phosphoric acid/acetonitrile) in order to achieve baseline separation of all reaction components. The chromatographic simulation and modeling strategy served to generate 3D resolution maps with robust separation conditions that match the outcome of subsequent experimental data (overall ΔtR < 0.35%). Our multi-column UHPLC screening with computer-assisted chromatographic modeling is a great addition to the toolbox of synthetic chemists and can be a powerful tool for streamlining process chemistry optimization in organic chemistry laboratories across both academic and industrial sectors.


Carbamates/isolation & purification , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Heterocyclic Compounds, 2-Ring/isolation & purification , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/instrumentation , Computer Simulation
19.
J Chromatogr A ; 1595: 190-198, 2019 Jun 21.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30803788

The evolution of supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) instrumentation, improved detection capability, and expanded modifier range has led to extending the reach of SFC to the analysis of a broader spectrum of analytes beyond enantioselective separations. However, preparative SFC has yet to see the same technological revitalization, especially in regards to the purification of highly polar analytes. Enhanced fluidity liquid chromatography (EFLC) has been demonstrated as one of the ways to extend the applicable range of SFC instrumentation to highly polar analytes such as proteins, carbohydrates, and nucleotides. Despite recent applications of EFLC for challenging mixtures of hydrophilic metabolites and analogs, its viability in preparative purification, which is of great importance to the pharmaceutical industry, remains unknown. Herein, multiple chromatographic parameters that are critical to achieve feasible EFLC purification methods were investigated, including system pressure as a function of modifier composition (for several MeOH:H2O ratios), effect of diluent injection conditions on peak shape, and optimization of mass load with diluent composition. The usage of 50% acetonitrile or methanol diluents provided the most volumetric loading capacity. In the case of sucrose, leveraging higher analyte solubility in water proved to be more favorable than the volumetric loading capacity of diluents with higher organic content. In fact, an 80 mg injection of sucrose was possible on a 2 cm preparative HILIC column with minimal peak shape degradation. The combined information led to the successful demonstration of EFLC for the preparative separation of sugars using readily available MS-directed SFC instrumentation.


Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/methods , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid , Acetonitriles/chemistry , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Methanol/chemistry , Nucleotides/chemistry , Proteins/chemistry , Water/chemistry
20.
J Chromatogr A ; 1587: 129-135, 2019 Feb 22.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30591245

Nucleotides are among the most frequently used chemical building blocks in the research, development and manufacture of drug substances. They are composed of three highly polar subunit molecules (a nucleobase, a sugar, and at least one phosphate group), which makes their separation and analysis very challenging by conventional liquid chromatography techniques. Herein, we describe a simple, efficient, and cost-effective ion-exchange chromatography (IEC) method for the separation and purification of over 20 nucleotides. This method combines the use of a Tosoh TSKgel SuperQ-5P W resin in conjunction with a fully aqueous eluent profile (ammonium bicarbonate-based) that allows for a straightforward scale-up transition and convenient drying process with minimal environmental impact. This generic method was optimized using chromatography simulation software (ACD Labs/LC Simulator) and successfully applied to the preparative purification of multicomponent nucleotide mixtures using readily available Fast Protein Liquid Chromatography (FPLC) instrumentation. These IEC method conditions can be effectively applied as the starting point for method development and isolation of other highly polar nucleotide species beyond those investigated in this study.


Chromatography, Ion Exchange/methods , Nucleotides/isolation & purification , Pharmaceutical Preparations/analysis , Anions , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Nucleotides/chemistry
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