Abstract

Drug substance (DS) color is an important quality attribute for release, stability and comparability studies of biologics. With the increase of DS concentrations and biologics pipelines made in chemically defined media, atypical DS color other than colorless or pale yellow has been recently reported in the biopharmaceutical industry. We recently observed a brown DS color in manufacturing. Although analytical characterization data indicated that the brown color DS had no major quality issue, it is necessary to find the root cause and reduce DS color to ease placebo design for clinical use. It was demonstrated that the brown color was caused by the chemically defined basal medium containing high levels of iron and vitamin B12 (VB12) regardless of cell lines. Iron caused tryptophan oxidation in the protein to form N-formylkynurenine and kynurenine products, which likely contributed to a yellow DS color. A pink DS color was caused by the residual VB12 bound to DS. The brown color was the result of the combinatory effect of yellow and pink colors. Finally a modified basal medium was developed to produce a pale yellow DS in manufacturing.

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