The increasing number of protein therapeutics on the market and in industrial pipelines drives the need for a better understanding of their formulation to meet emerging trends such as ultra-high protein concentrations, aggregate formation by novel formats, and train specialists in the growing biopharmaceuticals sector. This led to the formation of the ITN network PIPPI (Protein-excipient Interactions and Protein-Protein Interactions in formulation), where 15 Ph.D. students were trained within protein formulation, with an emphasis in biophysical and structural characterization of protein therapeutics.
The consortium were located in Denmark, Sweden, Germany and United Kingdom. The students worked in an international and interdisciplinary network learning to combine systematic investigations of physicochemical behavior of a number of proteins with an in-depth understanding of the molecular interactions behind the macroscopic behavior.
We have published a comprehensive database for diverse protein architectures, which can be interrogated for the prediction of their properties and stability when complemented with a minimum number of experiments. The database contains characterization results from both high throughput methods, structural characterization and in-silico methods. From the 32 articles published so far the synergy between experimental and computational methods and between high-throughput and low-throughput methods are clear.