Cargando…

Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches

Understanding of generation, extent and location of thermomechanical stress in small-scale (< 3 g) ram and twin-screw melt-extrusion is crucial for mechanistic correlations to the stability of protein particles (lysozyme and BSA) in PEG-matrices. The aim of the study was to apply and correlate ex...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dauer, Katharina, Kayser, Kevin, Ellwanger, Felix, Overbeck, Achim, Kwade, Arno, Karbstein, Heike P., Wagner, Karl G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10336796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37448986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpx.2023.100196
_version_ 1785071283993575424
author Dauer, Katharina
Kayser, Kevin
Ellwanger, Felix
Overbeck, Achim
Kwade, Arno
Karbstein, Heike P.
Wagner, Karl G.
author_facet Dauer, Katharina
Kayser, Kevin
Ellwanger, Felix
Overbeck, Achim
Kwade, Arno
Karbstein, Heike P.
Wagner, Karl G.
author_sort Dauer, Katharina
collection PubMed
description Understanding of generation, extent and location of thermomechanical stress in small-scale (< 3 g) ram and twin-screw melt-extrusion is crucial for mechanistic correlations to the stability of protein particles (lysozyme and BSA) in PEG-matrices. The aim of the study was to apply and correlate experimental and numerical approaches (1D and 3D) for the evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability. The simulation of thermomechanical stress during extrusion raised the expectation of protein degradation and protein particle grinding during extrusion, especially when TSE was used. This was confirmed by experimental data on protein stability. Ram extrusion had the lowest impact on protein unfolding temperatures, whereas TSE showed significantly reduced unfolding temperatures, especially in combination with kneading elements containing screws. In TSE, the mechanical stress in the screws always exceeded the shear stress in the die, while mechanical stress within ram extrusion was generated in the die, only. As both extruder designs revealed homogeneously distributed protein particles over the cross section of the extrudates for all protein-loads (20–60%), the dispersive power of TSE revealed not to be decisive. Consequently, the ram extruder would be favored for the production of stable protein-loaded extrudates in small scale.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10336796
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Elsevier
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103367962023-07-13 Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches Dauer, Katharina Kayser, Kevin Ellwanger, Felix Overbeck, Achim Kwade, Arno Karbstein, Heike P. Wagner, Karl G. Int J Pharm X Research Paper Understanding of generation, extent and location of thermomechanical stress in small-scale (< 3 g) ram and twin-screw melt-extrusion is crucial for mechanistic correlations to the stability of protein particles (lysozyme and BSA) in PEG-matrices. The aim of the study was to apply and correlate experimental and numerical approaches (1D and 3D) for the evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability. The simulation of thermomechanical stress during extrusion raised the expectation of protein degradation and protein particle grinding during extrusion, especially when TSE was used. This was confirmed by experimental data on protein stability. Ram extrusion had the lowest impact on protein unfolding temperatures, whereas TSE showed significantly reduced unfolding temperatures, especially in combination with kneading elements containing screws. In TSE, the mechanical stress in the screws always exceeded the shear stress in the die, while mechanical stress within ram extrusion was generated in the die, only. As both extruder designs revealed homogeneously distributed protein particles over the cross section of the extrudates for all protein-loads (20–60%), the dispersive power of TSE revealed not to be decisive. Consequently, the ram extruder would be favored for the production of stable protein-loaded extrudates in small scale. Elsevier 2023-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10336796/ /pubmed/37448986 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpx.2023.100196 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Dauer, Katharina
Kayser, Kevin
Ellwanger, Felix
Overbeck, Achim
Kwade, Arno
Karbstein, Heike P.
Wagner, Karl G.
Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title_full Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title_fullStr Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title_full_unstemmed Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title_short Highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
title_sort highly protein-loaded melt extrudates produced by small-scale ram and twin-screw extrusion - evaluation of extrusion process design on protein stability by experimental and numerical approaches
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10336796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37448986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpx.2023.100196
work_keys_str_mv AT dauerkatharina highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT kayserkevin highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT ellwangerfelix highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT overbeckachim highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT kwadearno highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT karbsteinheikep highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches
AT wagnerkarlg highlyproteinloadedmeltextrudatesproducedbysmallscaleramandtwinscrewextrusionevaluationofextrusionprocessdesignonproteinstabilitybyexperimentalandnumericalapproaches