Abstract

The aim of the study was to comprehensively investigate the influence of the freezing step during lyophilization on the stability of gene-delivery particles in order to better understand particle stabilization during freezing. Particle size of plasmid/linear polyethylenimine (LPEI) polyplexes at two DNA concentrations and at increasing sucrose-DNA ratios was investigated separately as a function of freezing procedure, ice-nucleation temperature, residence time of the particles in a partially frozen state, or incomplete freezing. Using a numerical model, the increase in sucrose concentration and system viscosity and corresponding bimolecular reaction rates were theoretically estimated. Freezing with a temperature-hold step after ice nucleation negatively influenced particle stability. Ice-nucleation temperature had an impact only at low DNA concentrations. Particle stability was highly reduced during the early part of freezing (<-3°C), especially at low shelf-ramp rates. In this phase, bimolecular reaction rates increase greatly at still low system viscosity. Below a critical temperature (≤∼-18°C) and at high system viscosity, no further particle aggregation occurred. In conclusion, the initial sample viscosity rather than the unfrozen volume and the residence time of particles in the low-viscosity state are the predominant factors in particle stabilization, which likely apply to aggregation in any system.

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