Developing Discoveries into New Therapeutics - Formulators and developers are at the heart of the industry's basic premise—they are saving lives. - BioPharm International

ADVERTISEMENT

Developing Discoveries into New Therapeutics
Formulators and developers are at the heart of the industry's basic premise—they are saving lives.


BioPharm International
Volume 25, Issue 6, pp. 66

Recognition and reward deservedly come to those biomedical scientists who succeed in groundbreaking research to discover new proteins, pathways, techniques or mechanisms. There are a host of awards and honors from professional societies, trade organizations, national charities focused on diseases, and the ultimate in prestigious awards, the Nobel Prizes. Yet what is the practical value of such discoveries unless they are applied and developed to bring new medicines to the world?


Michiel E. Ultee, PhD
As bioprocessors, we are appliers of those discoveries, the developers who put into practice the discoveries of research and turn them into new biopharmaceutical products. We are the "D" of "R&D" —the ones who apply what research has discovered to create something useful. We look both ways, to research and manufacturing, to bridge these worlds with processes that are both robust and scalable.

Our work covers all aspects of biopharmaceuticals, from the earliest cell cultures to the finished vials of product. Research often presents us with low-titer cultures, sometimes with untenable ingredients like serum, and purification processes based on nonscalable techniques, such as affinity tags, dialysis, or precipitation. Processing is understandably minimal in research, given the focus on key properties of the molecule of interest rather than residual impurities or minor variants. Similarly, analytics, beyond those assessing the activity of the protein, are often limited as well.

What research does do is suggest a new potential therapeutic, a new approach to a disease or condition, and hence new hope for patients. Yet none of these admirable concepts can be realized until that discovery is developed into a safe and effective new biopharmaceutical. This is where we come into the picture.

Our upstream developers push titers with new cell lines, media and feeds, applying expert knowledge to bioreactor parameters to render the cells both prolific and productive. Our downstream scientists apply advanced chromatographic and filtration methods to yield "squeaky clean" proteins with only ppm levels of impurities, yet with reasonable recoveries. Our analytical biochemists analyze these trace impurities and apply sophisticated instrumentation to assess the multitude of molecular properties of the typically complex glycoproteins that we are developing.

Finally, formulation is an essential component of any biopharmaceutical. Stability is not a given, even for well-behaved proteins. We need to ensure that the chemical "neighborhood" in which we place a protein is one where it will both retain its activities and properties and not develop any new ones.

It is ironic that Alfred Nobel, himself a formulator and developer, chose to honor basic rather than applied research with his scientific prizes. In his own work, the key discovery, nitroglycerine, had been discovered more than twenty years before Nobel began working with it. There was just no safe way to handle it. His genius was in developing an effective, robust and scalable formulation that would allow this potent explosive to be safely and practically used. If basic research is our "Nitro," then bioprocessing should be considered the "Dynamite" of biopharmaceuticals.

Michiel E. Ultee, PhD, chief scientific officer, Laureate Biopharmaceutical Services, Princeton, NJ,
.

blog comments powered by Disqus

ADVERTISEMENT

Moscow Hosts IFPMA Biosimilars Conference
May 17, 2013
AbbVie and Alvine Will Collaborate on Celiac Disease Therapy
May 15, 2013
FDA Issues Pharmacoepidemiologic Safety Study Guidance
May 14, 2013
USP Launches Initiative to Fight Counterfeit Drugs in Sub-Saharan Africa
May 13, 2013
Amgen Forms New Joint Venture to Commercialize Vectibix in China
May 13, 2013
Upcoming Conferences
UPCOMING CONFERENCES

Access Programs for Investigational and Pre-Launch Drugs
Philadelphia, PA | July 17-18, 2013
Request Brochure

Strategic Pipeline Planning & Portfolio Valuation
Philadelphia, PA | August 13-14, 2013
Request Brochure

MES 2013 - Forum on Manufacturing Execution Systems
Philadelphia, PA | August 14-15, 2013
Request Brochure

Mobile Innovation for the Life Sciences Industry
Philadelphia, PA | August 20-21, 2013
Request Brochure

See All Conferences >>

ADVERTISEMENT

Author Guidelines
FindPharma
Source: BioPharm International,
Click here