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Dive into the research topics where Shahid Uddin is active.

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Featured researches published by Shahid Uddin.


Biotechnology Progress | 2007

Determining antibody stability: creation of solid-liquid interfacial effects within a high shear environment.

James G. Biddlecombe; Alan Craig; Hu Zhang; Shahid Uddin; Sandrine Mulot; Brendan Fish; Daniel G. Bracewell

The purpose of this study was to assess the stability of protein formulations using a device designed to generate defined, quantifiable levels of shear in the presence of a solid‐liquid interface. The device, based on a rotating disk, produced shear strain rates of up to 3.4 × 104 s−1 (at 250 rps) and was designed to exclude air‐liquid interfaces and enable temperature to be controlled. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) was used to study the fluid flow patterns within the device and to determine the shear strain rate (s−1) at a range of disk speeds. The device was then used to study the effect on a monoclonal IgG4 of high levels of shear at the solid‐liquid interface. Monomeric antibody concentration and aggregation of the protein in solution were monitored by gel permeation HPLC and turbidity at 350 nm. High shear strain rates were found to cause significant levels of protein aggregation and precipitation with reduction of protein monomer following first‐order kinetics. Monomer reduction rate was determined for a range of disk speeds and found to have a nonlinear relationship with shear strain rate, indicating the importance of identifying and minimizing such environments during processing.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2014

The role of electrostatics in protein-protein interactions of a monoclonal antibody

David Roberts; R. Keeling; Malgorzata B. Tracka; C. F. Van Der Walle; Shahid Uddin; Jim Warwicker; Robin Curtis

Understanding how protein-protein interactions depend on the choice of buffer, salt, ionic strength, and pH is needed to have better control over protein solution behavior. Here, we have characterized the pH and ionic strength dependence of protein-protein interactions in terms of an interaction parameter kD obtained from dynamic light scattering and the osmotic second virial coefficient B22 measured by static light scattering. A simplified protein-protein interaction model based on a Baxter adhesive potential and an electric double layer force is used to separate out the contributions of longer-ranged electrostatic interactions from short-ranged attractive forces. The ionic strength dependence of protein-protein interactions for solutions at pH 6.5 and below can be accurately captured using a Deryaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) potential to describe the double layer forces. In solutions at pH 9, attractive electrostatics occur over the ionic strength range of 5-275 mM. At intermediate pH values (7.25 to 8.5), there is a crossover effect characterized by a nonmonotonic ionic strength dependence of protein-protein interactions, which can be rationalized by the competing effects of long-ranged repulsive double layer forces at low ionic strength and a shorter ranged electrostatic attraction, which dominates above a critical ionic strength. The change of interactions from repulsive to attractive indicates a concomitant change in the angular dependence of protein-protein interaction from isotropic to anisotropic. In the second part of the paper, we show how the Baxter adhesive potential can be used to predict values of kD from fitting to B22 measurements, thus providing a molecular basis for the linear correlation between the two protein-protein interaction parameters.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2015

Specific Ion and Buffer Effects on Protein–Protein Interactions of a Monoclonal Antibody

Dorota Roberts; R. Keeling; Malgorzata B. Tracka; C. F. Van Der Walle; Shahid Uddin; Jim Warwicker; Robin Curtis

Better predictive ability of salt and buffer effects on protein-protein interactions requires separating out contributions due to ionic screening, protein charge neutralization by ion binding, and salting-in(out) behavior. We have carried out a systematic study by measuring protein-protein interactions for a monoclonal antibody over an ionic strength range of 25 to 525 mM at 4 pH values (5, 6.5, 8, and 9) in solutions containing sodium chloride, calcium chloride, sodium sulfate, or sodium thiocyante. The salt ions are chosen so as to represent a range of affinities for protein charged and noncharged groups. The results are compared to effects of various buffers including acetate, citrate, phosphate, histidine, succinate, or tris. In low ionic strength solutions, anion binding affinity is reflected by the ability to reduce protein-protein repulsion, which follows the order thiocyanate > sulfate > chloride. The sulfate specific effect is screened at the same ionic strength required to screen the pH dependence of protein-protein interactions indicating sulfate binding only neutralizes protein charged groups. Thiocyanate specific effects occur over a larger ionic strength range reflecting adsorption to charged and noncharged regions of the protein. The latter leads to salting-in behavior and, at low pH, a nonmonotonic interaction profile with respect to sodium thiocyanate concentration. The effects of thiocyanate can not be rationalized in terms of only neutralizing double layer forces indicating the presence of an additional short-ranged protein-protein attraction at moderate ionic strength. Conversely, buffer specific effects can be explained through a charge neutralization mechanism, where buffers with greater valency are more effective at reducing double layer forces at low pH. Citrate binding at pH 6.5 leads to protein charge inversion and the formation of attractive electrostatic interactions. Throughout the report, we highlight similarities in the measured protein-protein interaction profiles with previous studies of globular proteins and of antibodies providing evidence that the behavior will be common to other protein systems.


Biotechnology Progress | 2009

Factors influencing antibody stability at solid–liquid interfaces in a high shear environment

James G. Biddlecombe; Graeme E. Smith; Shahid Uddin; Sandrine Mulot; David Spencer; Chris Gee; Brendan Fish; Daniel G. Bracewell

A rotating disk shear device was used to study the effect of interfacial shear on the structural integrity of human monoclonal antibodies of IgG4 isotype. Factors associated with the solution conditions (pH, ionic strength, surfactant concentration, temperature) and the interface (surface roughness) were studied for their effect on the rate of IgG4 monomer loss under high shear conditions. The structural integrity of the IgG4 was probed after exposure to interfacial shear effects by SDS‐PAGE, IEF, dynamic light scattering, and peptide mapping by LC‐MS. This analysis revealed that the main denaturation pathway of IgG4 exposed to these effects was the formation of large insoluble aggregates. Soluble aggregation, breakdown in primary structure, and chemical modifications were not detected. The dominant factors found to affect the rate of IgG4 monomer loss under interfacial shear conditions were found to be pH and the nanometer‐scale surface roughness associated with the solid‐liquid interface. Interestingly, temperature was not found to be a significant factor in the range tested (15–45°C). The addition of surfactant was found to have a significant stabilizing effect at concentrations up to 0.02% (w/v). Implications of these findings for the bioprocessing of this class of therapeutic protein are briefly discussed.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014

The effect of arginine glutamate on the stability of monoclonal antibodies in solution

Priscilla Kheddo; Malgorzata B. Tracka; Jonathan Armer; Rebecca J. Dearman; Shahid Uddin; Christopher F. van der Walle; Alexander P. Golovanov

Graphical abstract


PLOS ONE | 2014

Redistribution of Flexibility in Stabilizing Antibody Fragment Mutants Follows Le Châtelier’s Principle

Tong Li; Malgorzata B. Tracka; Shahid Uddin; Jose Casas-Finet; Donald J. Jacobs; Dennis R. Livesay

Le Châtelier’s principle is the cornerstone of our understanding of chemical equilibria. When a system at equilibrium undergoes a change in concentration or thermodynamic state (i.e., temperature, pressure, etc.), La Châtelier’s principle states that an equilibrium shift will occur to offset the perturbation and a new equilibrium is established. We demonstrate that the effects of stabilizing mutations on the rigidity ⇔ flexibility equilibrium within the native state ensemble manifest themselves through enthalpy-entropy compensation as the protein structure adjusts to restore the global balance between the two. Specifically, we characterize the effects of mutation to single chain fragments of the anti-lymphotoxin-β receptor antibody using a computational Distance Constraint Model. Statistically significant changes in the distribution of both rigidity and flexibility within the molecular structure is typically observed, where the local perturbations often lead to distal shifts in flexibility and rigidity profiles. Nevertheless, the net gain or loss in flexibility of individual mutants can be skewed. Despite all mutants being exclusively stabilizing in this dataset, increased flexibility is slightly more common than increased rigidity. Mechanistically the redistribution of flexibility is largely controlled by changes in the H-bond network. For example, a stabilizing mutation can induce an increase in rigidity locally due to the formation of new H-bonds, and simultaneously break H-bonds elsewhere leading to increased flexibility distant from the mutation site via Le Châtelier. Increased flexibility within the VH β4/β5 loop is a noteworthy illustration of this long-range effect.


mAbs | 2013

Adsorption behavior of a human monoclonal antibody at hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces

Ruairidh G. Couston; Maximilian W. A. Skoda; Shahid Uddin; Christopher F. van der Walle

One aspiration for the formulation of human monoclonal antibodies (mAb) is to reach high solution concentrations without compromising stability. Protein surface activity leading to instability is well known, but our understanding of mAb adsorption to the solid-liquid interface in relevant pH and surfactant conditions is incomplete. To investigate these conditions, we used total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) and neutron reflectometry (NR). The mAb tested (“mAb-1”) showed highest surface loading to silica at pH 7.4 (~12 mg/m2), with lower surface loading at pH 5.5 (~5.5 mg/m2, further from its pI of 8.99) and to hydrophobized silica (~2 mg/m2). The extent of desorption of mAb-1 from silica or hydrophobized silica was related to the relative affinity of polysorbate 20 or 80 for the same surface. mAb-1 adsorbed to silica on co-injection with polysorbate (above its critical micelle concentration) and also to silica pre-coated with polysorbate. A bilayer model was developed from NR data for mAb-1 at concentrations of 50–5000 mg/L, pH 5.5, and 50–2000 mg/L, pH 7.4. The inner mAb-1 layer was adsorbed to the SiO2 surface at near saturation with an end-on” orientation, while the outer mAb-1 layer was sparse and molecules had a “side-on” orientation. A non-uniform triple layer was observed at 5000 mg/L, pH 7.4, suggesting mAb-1 adsorbed to the SiO2 surface as oligomers at this concentration and pH. mAb-1 adsorbed as a sparse monolayer to hydrophobized silica, with a layer thickness increasing with bulk concentration - suggesting a near end-on orientation without observable relaxation-unfolding.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2015

Rigidity Emerges during Antibody Evolution in Three Distinct Antibody Systems: Evidence from QSFR Analysis of Fab Fragments

Tong Li; Malgorzata B. Tracka; Shahid Uddin; Jose Casas-Finet; Donald J. Jacobs; Dennis R. Livesay

The effects of somatic mutations that transform polyspecific germline (GL) antibodies to affinity mature (AM) antibodies with monospecificity are compared among three GL-AM Fab pairs. In particular, changes in conformational flexibility are assessed using a Distance Constraint Model (DCM). We have previously established that the DCM can be robustly applied across a series of antibody fragments (VL to Fab), and subsequently, the DCM was combined with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to similarly characterize five thermostabilizing scFv mutants. The DCM is an ensemble based statistical mechanical approach that accounts for enthalpy/entropy compensation due to network rigidity, which has been quite successful in elucidating conformational flexibility and Quantitative Stability/Flexibility Relationships (QSFR) in proteins. Applied to three disparate antibody systems changes in QSFR quantities indicate that the VH domain is typically rigidified, whereas the VL domain and CDR L2 loop become more flexible during affinity maturation. The increase in CDR H3 loop rigidity is consistent with other studies in the literature. The redistribution of conformational flexibility is largely controlled by nonspecific changes in the H-bond network, although certain Arg to Asp salt bridges create highly localized rigidity increases. Taken together, these results reveal an intricate flexibility/rigidity response that accompanies affinity maturation.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2014

The effect of palmitoylation on the conformation and physical stability of a model peptide hormone

Edoardo Longo; Emiliana De Santis; Rohanah Hussain; Christopher F. van der Walle; Jose Casas-Finet; Shahid Uddin; Ana Lucia Gomes dos Santos; Giuliano Siligardi

Peptides are ideal drug candidates due to their potency and specificity, but suffer from a short half-life and low membrane permeability. Acylation can overcome these limitations but the consequences to stability under different formulation conditions and stresses are largely unreported. Using synchrotron radiation circular dichroism (SRCD), we show that palmitoylation of a 28 amino acid peptide hormone (pI 9.82) induced a structural transition from 310-helix to α-helix, irrespective of buffer type and pH investigated (5.5-8.0) when compared to the non acylated analogues. These conformational preferences were retained in the presence of non-ionic micelles but not anionic micelles, which induced an α-helical structure for all peptides. Palmitoylation promoted an irreversible peptide denaturation under thermal stress at pH ≥ 6.5 and increased the propensity for loss of helical structure under high photon flux (here used as a novel accelerated photostability test). The presence of either ionic or non-ionic micelles did not recover these conformational changes over the same irradiation period. These results demonstrate that acylation can change peptide conformation and decrease thermal-/photo-stability, with important consequences for drug-development strategies.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2012

Interaction and destabilization of a monoclonal antibody and albumin to surfaces of varying functionality and hydrophobicity

Ruairidh G. Couston; Dimitrios A. Lamprou; Shahid Uddin; Christopher F. van der Walle

Protein products come into contact with many surfaces of differing wettability during bioprocessing, formulation and delivery, but corresponding data for the adsorbed conformations and the associated force of adhesion (F(ad)) is sparse. Here we have generated a series of hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces through silanization of silica with various terminal groups, characterizing the surface energies and droplet contact angles. F(ad) measured by atomic force microscopy for oriented monolayers of a human monoclonal antibody (mAb-1) clearly distinguished hydrophobic surfaces (low F(ad) values) from hydrophilic surfaces (high F(ad) values). High F(ad) for a methoxy capped polyethylene glycol (1000 MW) surface supports the interaction of mAb-1 with buried ethylene oxide groups, consistent with mAb-1 compression into a distorted brush border. Solid state circular dichroism showed that mAb-1 (β-sheet) or albumin (α-helical) adsorbed to bare silica beads largely retained their secondary structures. However, the extent of structural loss upon protein adsorption to functionalized silica beads could not be simply correlated to hydrophilic/hydrophobic surface interaction as seen for the F(ad) measurements. For example, of the hydrophilic surfaces mAb-1 unfolded notably more when adsorbed to the aminopropyl surface, and of the hydrophobic surfaces both mAb-1 and albumin retained most secondary structure when adsorbed to the perfluorooctyl surface (consistent with the lipophobic perfluorinated moiety limiting exposure of the protein hydrophobic core). The data show that F(ad) values are not necessarily predictive of the subsequent extent of structural relaxation, and that significant structural loss is evident for proteins adsorbed to both hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces.

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Donald J. Jacobs

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Robin Curtis

University of Manchester

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Dennis R. Livesay

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Jim Warwicker

University of Manchester

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Alain Pluen

University of Manchester

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