Non-reduced peptide mapping provides essential data for characterizing therapeutic monoclonal antibodies by isolating disulfide connections between specific cysteines. However, conventional digestive strategies used throughout the biopharmaceutical industry have been shown to cause unintentional rearrangement of disulfide connections (disulfide scrambling), thus generating connectivity profiles that do not accurately represent the protein being analyzed. Common misconceptions (e.g. avoiding basic-pH digestion to prevent disulfide scrambling) have led to the development of alternative reagents and conditions that can alleviate this issue, but yield problematic digestion profiles. Herein, we systematically and comprehensively examine the primary considerations for accurate non-reduced peptide mapping, and provide effective, practical solutions to minimize undesired behavior while still yielding high-quality digests. Additionally, we present a method that exploits intentional disulfide scrambling as a reference tool to demonstrate the robustness of our proposed strategies. We also introduce maleimide as a cysteine-alkylating reagent and demonstrate its benefits over industry-leading analogs such as N-ethylmaleimide in terms of compatibility with regulatory reports.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19420862.2024.2420805 | DOI Listing |
MAbs
October 2024
Department of Analytical Chemistry, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc, Tarrytown, NY, USA.
Non-reduced peptide mapping provides essential data for characterizing therapeutic monoclonal antibodies by isolating disulfide connections between specific cysteines. However, conventional digestive strategies used throughout the biopharmaceutical industry have been shown to cause unintentional rearrangement of disulfide connections (disulfide scrambling), thus generating connectivity profiles that do not accurately represent the protein being analyzed. Common misconceptions (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chromatogr A
November 2024
National Institutes for Food and Drug Control, State Key Laboratory of Drug Regulatory Science, NHC Key Laboratory of Research on Quality and Standardization of Biotech Products, NMPA Key Laboratory for Quality Research and Evaluation of Biological Products, Daxing District, Beijing, 102629, China. Electronic address:
The characterization of cysteine-linked antibody‒drug conjugates (ADCs) can be more challenging than that of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and lysine-linked ADCs because the interchain disulfide bonds are reduced for payload conjugation, and the chains are noncovalently bonded to each other. Furthermore, payload conjugation and disulfide bond reduction/scrambling may introduce additional charge heterogeneity to biomolecules. This study illustrates an innovative workflow employing multiple separation techniques and tandem high-resolution mass spectrometry for comprehensive and in-depth characterization of disitamab vedotin, a recent-generation cysteine-linked ADC, including reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC), ion exchange chromatography (IEX) and image capillary isoelectric focusing (icIEF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharm Biomed Anal
November 2024
Biologics Analytical Science, Incyte Corporation, 1801 Augustine Cut-off, Wilmington, DE 19803, USA.
Development of monoclonal and bispecific antibody-based protein therapeutics requires detailed characterization of native disulfide linkages, which is commonly achieved through peptide mapping under non-reducing conditions followed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analysis. One major challenge of this method is incomplete protein digestion due to insufficient denaturation of antibodies under non-reducing conditions. For a long time, researchers have explored various strategies with the aim of efficiently digesting antibody drugs when the disulfide bonds remain intact, but few could achieve this by using a simple and generic approach with well controlled disulfide scrambling artifacts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharm Sci
August 2024
BioTools Inc., Jupiter, FL 33478, United States.
Characterization and understanding of protein higher order structure (HOS) is essential at all stages of biologics development. Here, two folding variants of a bispecific monoclonal antibody, the correctly folded form and an alternative configuration with reduced potency, were characterized by several HOS characterization techniques. Specifically, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), circular dichroism (CD), Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), Raman and Raman optical activity (ROA) spectroscopy were used together to elucidate the impacts of disulfide bond scrambling in the fused scFv domains on the structure and thermal stability of the antibody.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRSC Adv
March 2024
State Key Laboratory Materials-Oriented Chemical Engineering, College of Biotechnology and Pharmaceutical Engineering, Nanjing Tech University 30 Puzhu Road South Nanjing 211816 China
The smallest Hückel aromatic ring cyclopropenium substituted by electron-donating C-amino groups produced a aminocyclopropenium electron-rich cation. A bifunctional aminocyclopropenium halide catalyst installed with bis-(hydroxyethyl) functions on the amino group was then designed. A typical (diethanolamino)cyclopropenium halide catalyst C5·I was screened optimally for the cycloaddition of carbon disulfide into an epoxide to produce cyclic dithiocarbonate with an excellent conversion (95%) and high selectivity (92%).
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