Biologics Flashcards
1
Q
How are monoclonal antibody preparations made?
A
- Inject antigen to stimulate antibody production in rats
- Grow (immune) tumour cells in tissue culture
- Each immune cell will to fuse with with one antibody– forms hybridomas
2
Q
Explain the details of the original technology developed by Medicago for quick and mass production of antibodies.
A
- has a greenhouse + extraction and purification unit that can produce more than 10 mil doses of vaccines per month
1. Light chain and Heavy chain of DNA is collected and inserted into a cloning vector
2. Insert cloning vector in plant leaves (vac infiltration) –> most of these cells will not contain the DNA to produce that specific antibody
3. expression of genes and production of antibodies within plant cells
3
Q
Different steps and intermolecular interactions involved in the formation of an antigen-antibody complex.
A
- Antigen = epitope –> binds to antibody = Paratope (4-10 amino acids)
- interaction only requires 2 amino acids
1. Attracted by long range forces (ionic/hydrophobic bonds)
2. Short range structural fit (van der waals and some ionic interaction)
3. Affinity depends on goodness of fit between the 2 surfaces and total contact area
4
Q
Monoclonal antibody
A
- an antibody produced by a single clone of cells or cell line and consisting of identical antibody molecules
- one antibody for one antigen
5
Q
Polyclonal antibody
A
- They are a collection of immunoglobulin molecules that react against a specific antigen, each identifying a different epitope
- several antibodies on one anitgen
6
Q
Biosimilars in biologics/biomolecules
A
- Product has to be HIGHLY SIMILAR to an FDA approved reference biomolecule
- There has to be no clinicalyly meaningful differences in terms of safety and effectiveness from ref drug.
- NEED some research to assure equivalence but no need to start from scratch
7
Q
Biomolecules/Biologics
A
- Large structures (than conventional drugs) that are stereospecific
- ex. DNA or proteins (larger cells or organs)
- AA sequence has to be altered to make it more similar to what naturally happens in humans
8
Q
Biologics… here to stay?
A
- Conventional drugs are starting to decline as biomolecules increase but biologics are more expensive
9
Q
Biologics (Production, structure, prep, stability, generic)
A
- Produced in living cells
- Large complex structure
- need to do several tests (multiple isoforms can exist)
- Stability of product can be impacted very easily (various factors - heat etc) + can change over time as cell lines evolve
- Difficult to replicate using current technology
10
Q
Small-molecule drugs (Production, structure, prep, stability, generic)
A
- Produced using standard chemical reactions
- Simple, small structure
- Well defined and prepared + can be purified quite easily
- Stable under most conditions
- Easy for companies to replicate
11
Q
Bioequivalence in conventional drugs
A
- 90% interval to fall between 80-125%
- no need to repeat clinical studies (only PK is needed)
- FDA only allows 20% variation
- Generic brands don’t need to do clinical trials or prove that it works
12
Q
Possible resistance to antibody drugs?
A
- TNF (tumour necrotic factor) triggers inflammation needs to be inhibited by anti-TNF antibodies