2019 AIChE Annual Meeting
(560n) Towards Pharmaceutical Protein Stabilization: Insights from Theoretical Studies on Peptide Hydrolysis Reactions
Recently, molecular models are being developed for enhanced prescriptive stabilization of antibodies. To better understand the mechanisms, the activation barrier (Ea) and free energy (oG) of the reaction system must be estimated. One common method of determining the activation barrier of a system is through the use of the Evans-Polanyi correlation, which requires detailed thermochemical understanding of dipeptides and their individual amino acid components. For this purpose, we conducted a computational study of a small subset of dipeptides to predict the thermodynamic properties to begin generating a library of thermodynamic and kinetic values. The optimized geometries of the dipeptides were investigated using the Gaussian n-method at the B3LYP level of theory, as well as different solvation methods to analyze the impact of solvation on thermodynamic and kinetic properties. To validate our methodology, we compared our optimized frequencies to infrared spectra and experimental rate coefficients from current literature. Our studies have established trends in thermodynamic properties (Enthalpy of reaction (oHR), Entropy (oS), and Gibbs free energy of reaction (oGR), as a function of peptide functional groups. These learnings, which will promote more efficient additive formulation, are discussed in terms of dipeptides degraded via hydrolysis reaction, at neutral pH.
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