2002
DOI: 10.1007/b112935
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Formulation, Characterization, and Stability of Protein Drugs: Case Histories

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Cited by 6 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…The presence of two exposed thiol groups on the FGF-2 surface promotes the formation of disulphide-linked multimers, and this propensity to form disulphide bonds drives FGF-2 to form aggregates. Interestingly, aggregation in the presence of glucosaminoglycans appeared to preserve the native FGF-2 conformation while the absence of glucosaminoglycans led to a denatured conformation similar to those induced by heat or chaotrope exposure [42].…”
Section: Fgf-2 Structure and Stabilitymentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…The presence of two exposed thiol groups on the FGF-2 surface promotes the formation of disulphide-linked multimers, and this propensity to form disulphide bonds drives FGF-2 to form aggregates. Interestingly, aggregation in the presence of glucosaminoglycans appeared to preserve the native FGF-2 conformation while the absence of glucosaminoglycans led to a denatured conformation similar to those induced by heat or chaotrope exposure [42].…”
Section: Fgf-2 Structure and Stabilitymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Hydrophobic residues line the core of the barrel while a large number of charged residues are present on the protein surface. A cluster of positively charged residues to one side is thought to constitute the heparin binding region of the protein [42]. The receptor binding domain is also in this vicinity but is distinct from the heparin binding region [41].…”
Section: Fgf-2 Structure and Stabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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