Welcome to Iris Biotech
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Thank you very much for your interest in our products. All prices listed on our website are ex-works, Germany, and may attract customs duties when imported.
You may/will be contacted by the shipping company for additional documentation that may be required by the US Customs for clearance.
We offer you the convenience of buying through a local partner, Peptide Solutions LLC who can import the shipment as well as prepay the customs duties and brokerage on your behalf and provide the convenience of a domestic sale.
Continue to Iris Biotech GmbHSend request to US distributorPublished on 21.09.2022
During initial research work, yield during the solid phase peptide synthesis hardly matters as long as the desired product is obtained. Furthermore, modern chromatographic technologies, e.g. preparative HPLC, are so powerful that also only slight amounts of the desired product can rather easily be isolated out of complex mixtures even in the presence of several impurities and side-products.
In contrast, the industrial and particularly pharmaceutical production of peptides and peptide APIs requires high purity levels, and each impurity should ideally be identified and be present in less than 0.5%. Especially if one of the impurities has the same elution properties and retention time as the target peptide, the isolation of the desired sequences becomes challenging. As soon as the production becomes of commercial interest, all efforts are naturally cost dependent, the yield gained plays a major role accompanied by the efforts to isolate the desired product out of all present impurities.
Most common sources for peptide impurities are:
Example of possible reactions creating undesired impurities, like oxidized methionine and alkylated tryptophan.
Our team has decades of experience in bringing peptides from research to commercial scale and will accompany you during this transition period with the following approach:
a) Repeating the synthesis with your given method; identification of all impurities formed and determination of yields at each step;
b) Systematic evaluation and optimization of each coupling step to maximize the yield of each individual step. This includes screening of different coupling reagents, solvents and additives, as well as reaction temperature;
c) Optimizing cleavage from the resin, including screening of different linkers, selection of different cleavage conditions, e.g. by variation of acids, reaction times, reaction temperature and addition of different scavengers;
d) Optimization of the final purification of the peptide by selection of appropriate chromatographic methods, i.e. ion chromatography or HPLC, as well as alternative methods liquid/liquid extraction methods or new state-of-the-art technologies, such as safety-catch technologies by PEC purification;
e) Technology transfer to the production of your choice.
➔ Inquire for our Custom Synthesis services. Download our brochure for more information
➔ Reach out to us for Process Development of your peptide.
References:
Peptide Impurities in Commercial Synthetic Peptides and Their Implications for Vaccine Trail Assessment; J. R. Currier, L. M. Galley, H. Wenschuh, V. Morafo, S. Ratto-Kim, C. M. Gray, L. Maboko, M. Hoelscher, M. A. Marovich, J. H. Cox; Clin. Vaccine Immunol. 2008; 15: 267-276. https://doi.org/10.1128/CVI.00284-07
The impact of impurities in synthetic peptides on the outcome of t-cell stimulation assays; J. W. K. de Beukelaar, J. W Gratama, P. A. Smitt, G M. G. M. Verjans, J. Kraan, T. M. Luider, P. C. Burgers; Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2007; 21: 1282-1288. https://doi.org/10.1002/rcm.2958
T Cells Recognizing a Peptide Contaminant Undetectable by Mass Spectrometry; V. Brezar, S. Culina, T. Østerbye, F. Guillonneau, G. Chiappetta, Y. Verdier, J. Vinh, F. S. Wong, S. Buus, R. Mallone; Plos One 2011; 6: e28866. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0028866