Discovery and investigation of O-xylosylation in engineered proteins containing a (GGGGS)n linker.

Anal Chem

Analytical Biochemistry, Department of Biologics Drug Discovery, Biogen Idec, 12 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, United States.

Published: May 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Protein engineering improves therapeutic proteins by enhancing efficacy, safety, and delivery, with GGGGS (G4S)n linkers known for flexibility and protease resistance.
  • The study identifies O-xylosylation as a common post-translational modification at the serine residue within (G4S)n linkers, showing that its occurrence is related to the number of GSG motifs present.
  • Variability in O-xylosylation levels among different proteins was observed, highlighting the importance of monitoring this modification to ensure the quality and consistency of therapeutic products.

Article Abstract

Protein engineering is a powerful tool for designing or modifying therapeutic proteins for enhanced efficacy, greater safety, reduced immunogenicity, and better delivery. GGGGS [(G4S)n] linkers are commonly used when engineering a protein, because of their flexibility and resistance to proteases. However, post-translational modifications (PTMs) can occur at the Ser residue in these linkers. Here, we report, for the first time, the occurrence of O-xylosylation at the serine residue in (G4S)n>2 linkers. The O-xylosylation was discovered as a result of molecular mass determination, peptide mapping analysis, and MS/MS sequencing. Our investigation showed that (i) O-xylosylation is a common PTM for (G4S)(n>2) linkers; (ii) GSG is the motif for O-xylosylation; and (iii) the total amount of xylosylation per linker increases as the number of GSG motifs in the linker increases. Our investigation has also shown that the O-xylosylation level is clone-dependent, to a certain degree, but the xylosylation level varies considerably among the proteins examined-from <2% to >25% per linker-likely depending on the accessibility to the sites by the xylosyltransferase. Our work demonstrates that potential therapeutic proteins containing (G4S)n linkers should be closely monitored for O-xylosylation in order to ensure that drugs are homogeneous and of high quality. The strategies for elimination and reduction of O-xylosylation were also examined and are discussed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ac400596gDOI Listing

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Discovery and investigation of O-xylosylation in engineered proteins containing a (GGGGS)n linker.

Anal Chem

May 2013

Analytical Biochemistry, Department of Biologics Drug Discovery, Biogen Idec, 12 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, United States.

Article Synopsis
  • Protein engineering improves therapeutic proteins by enhancing efficacy, safety, and delivery, with GGGGS (G4S)n linkers known for flexibility and protease resistance.
  • The study identifies O-xylosylation as a common post-translational modification at the serine residue within (G4S)n linkers, showing that its occurrence is related to the number of GSG motifs present.
  • Variability in O-xylosylation levels among different proteins was observed, highlighting the importance of monitoring this modification to ensure the quality and consistency of therapeutic products.
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