1 research outputs found
Collision Induced Unfolding of Intact Antibodies: Rapid Characterization of Disulfide Bonding Patterns, Glycosylation, and Structures
Monoclonal antibodies
(mAbs) are among the fastest growing class
of therapeutics due to their high specificity and low incidence of
side effects. Unlike most drugs, mAbs are complex macromolecules (∼150
kDa), leading to a host of quality control and characterization challenges
inherent in their development. Recently, we introduced a new approach
for the analysis of the intact proteins based on ion mobility-mass
spectrometry (IM-MS). Our protocol involves the collision induced
unfolding (CIU) of intact antibodies, where collisional heating in
the gas-phase is used to generate unfolded antibody forms, which are
subsequently separated by IM and then analyzed by MS. Collisional
energy is added to the antibody ions in a stepwise fashion, and “fingerprint
plots” are created that track the amount of unfolding undergone
as a function of the energy imparted to the ions prior to IM separation.
In this report, we have used these fingerprints to rapidly distinguish
between antibody isoforms, possessing different numbers and/or patterns
of disulfide bonding and general levels of glycosylation. In addition,
we validate our CIU protocols through control experiments and systematic
statistical evaluations of CIU reproducibility. We conclude by projecting
the impact of our approach for antibody-related drug discovery and
development applications
