Fc-fusion proteins are an emerging class of protein therapeutics that combine the properties of biological ligands with the unique properties of the fragment crystallizable (Fc) domain of an immunoglobulin G (IgG). Due to their diverse higher-order structures (HOSs), Fc-fusion proteins remain challenging characterization targets within biopharmaceutical pipelines. While high-resolution biophysical tools are available for HOS characterization, they frequently demand extended time frames and substantial quantities of purified samples, rendering them impractical for swiftly screening candidate molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein, we report on the experimental measurements for estimated relative mobility shifts caused by changes in mass distribution from isotopic substitutions in isotopologues and isotopomers with high-resolution cyclic ion mobility separations. By utilizing unlabeled and fully labeled isotopologues with the same isotopic substitutions (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn high-resolution ion mobility spectrometry-mass spectrometry (IMS-MS)-based separations individual, pure, oligosaccharide species often produce multiple IMS peaks presumably from their α/β anomers, cation attachment site conformations, and/or other energetically favorable structures. Herein, the use of high-resolution traveling wave-based cyclic IMS-MS to systematically investigate the origin of these multiple peaks by analyzing α1,4- and β1,4-linked d-glucose homopolymers as a function of their group I metal adducts is presented. Across varying degrees of polymerization, and for certain metal adducts, at least two major IMS peaks with relative areas that matched the ∼40:60 ratio for the α/β anomers of a reducing-end d-glucose as previously calculated by NMR were observed.
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