Seeded droplet microfluidic system for small molecule crystallization.


Journal

Lab on a chip
ISSN: 1473-0189
Titre abrégé: Lab Chip
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101128948

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
19 05 2020
Historique:
pubmed: 24 4 2020
medline: 22 6 2021
entrez: 24 4 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

A microfluidic approach to seeded crystallization has been demonstrated using abacavir hemisulfate, a nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitor, in droplet reactors to control polymorphism and produce particles with a low particle size distribution. Two techniques are introduced: (1) the first technique involves an emulsion system consisting of a dispersed phase solvent and a continuous phase, which holds slight solubility of the dispersed phase solvent. The dispersed phase contains both a dissolved active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) and seeds of the desired polymorph. While the continuous phase enables solvent extraction, the negligible solubility of the API allows for growth of seeds inside droplets via extraction and subsequent API saturation. This technique demonstrates the ability to crystallize the API in spherical agglomerates via slow extraction of droplets. (2) The second technique utilizes a combined dispersed phase by joining in-flow a seed suspension stream with a supersaturated active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) stream. The combined dispersed phase is emulsified in a continuous phase for which the dispersed phase solvent and the API are both insoluble - droplets are incubated at temperatures below their saturation limit to induce crystal growth. Decreasing the concentration of seeds in its input stream resulted in a decreased number of crystals per droplet, increase in crystal size, and decrease in PSD. Temperature cycling was utilized as a proof of concept to demonstrate the ability to reduce the number of seeds per droplet where the optimal goal is to obtain a single seed per droplet for all droplets. Utilizing this approach in conjunction with the ability to produce monodispersed droplet reactors allows for enhanced control of particle size distribution (PSD) by precisely controlling the available mass for each individual seed crystal. The development of this technique as a proof-of-concept for crystallization can be expanded to manufacturing scales in a continuous manner using parallelized droplet generators and flow reactors to precisely control the temperature and crystal growth kinetics of individual droplets.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32322845
doi: 10.1039/d0lc00122h
doi:

Substances chimiques

Emulsions 0

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1815-1826

Auteurs

N Garg (N)

Advanced Manufacturing Technologies, GlaxoSmithKline, 709 Swedeland Road, King of Prussia, PA, USA. david.x.lai@gsk.com.

Articles similaires

Inclusion Bodies Solubility Recombinant Proteins Detergents Protein Denaturation
Nanoparticles Needles Polylactic Acid-Polyglycolic Acid Copolymer Polyethylene Glycols Curcumin

Elucidating ATP's role as solubilizer of biomolecular aggregate.

Susmita Sarkar, Saurabh Gupta, Chiranjit Mahato et al.
1.00
Adenosine Triphosphate Protein Aggregates Solubility Humans Protein Conformation

Classifications MeSH