12 research outputs found
Use of a charge reducing agent to enable intact mass analysis of cysteine-linked antibody-drug-conjugates by native mass spectrometry
AbstractAntibody-drug-conjugates (ADC) are a growing class of anticancer biopharmaceuticals. Conjugation of cysteine linked ADCs, requires initial reduction of mAb inter-chain disulfide bonds, as the drugs are attached via thiol chemistry. This results in the active mAb moiety being transformed from a covalently linked tetramer to non-covalently linked complexes, which hinders precise determination of drug load with LC–MS. Here, we show how the addition of the charge reducing agent triethylammonium acetate (TEAA) preserves the intact mAb structure, is well suited to the study of cysteine linked conjugates and facilitates easy drug load determination by direct infusion native MS
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Structure-functional changes in eNAMPT at high concentrations mediate mouse and human beta- cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes
Aims/hypothesis
Progressive decline in functional beta cell mass is central to the development of type 2 diabetes. Elevated serum levels of extracellular nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase (eNAMPT) are associated with beta cell failure in type 2 diabetes and eNAMPT immuno-neutralisation improves glucose tolerance in mouse models of diabetes. Despite this, the effects of eNAMPT on functional beta cell mass are poorly elucidated, with some studies having separately reported beta cell-protective effects of eNAMPT. eNAMPT exists in structurally and functionally distinct monomeric and dimeric forms. Dimerisation is essential for the NAD-biosynthetic capacity of NAMPT. Monomeric eNAMPT does not possess NAD-biosynthetic capacity and may exert distinct NAD-independent effects. This study aimed to fully characterise the structure-functional effects of eNAMPT on pancreatic beta cell functional mass and to relate these to beta cell failure in type 2 diabetes.
Methods
CD-1 mice and serum from obese humans who were without diabetes, with impaired fasting glucose (IFG) or with type 2 diabetes (from the Body Fat, Surgery and Hormone [BodyFatS&H] study) or with or at risk of developing type 2 diabetes (from the VaSera trial) were used in this study. We generated recombinant wild-type and monomeric eNAMPT to explore the effects of eNAMPT on functional beta cell mass in isolated mouse and human islets. Beta cell function was determined by static and dynamic insulin secretion and intracellular calcium microfluorimetry. NAD-biosynthetic capacity of eNAMPT was assessed by colorimetric and fluorescent assays and by native mass spectrometry. Islet cell number was determined by immunohistochemical staining for insulin, glucagon and somatostatin, with islet apoptosis determined by caspase 3/7 activity. Markers of inflammation and beta cell identity were determined by quantitative reverse transcription PCR. Total, monomeric and dimeric eNAMPT and nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMN) were evaluated by ELISA, western blot and fluorometric assay using serum from non-diabetic, glucose intolerant and type 2 diabetic individuals.
Results
eNAMPT exerts bimodal and concentration- and structure-functional-dependent effects on beta cell functional mass. At low physiological concentrations (~1 ng/ml), as seen in serum from humans without diabetes, eNAMPT enhances beta cell function through NAD-dependent mechanisms, consistent with eNAMPT being present as a dimer. However, as eNAMPT concentrations rise to ~5 ng/ml, as in type 2 diabetes, eNAMPT begins to adopt a monomeric form and mediates beta cell dysfunction, reduced beta cell identity and number, increased alpha cell number and increased apoptosis, through NAD-independent proinflammatory mechanisms.
Conclusions/interpretation
We have characterised a novel mechanism of beta cell dysfunction in type 2 diabetes. At low physiological levels, eNAMPT exists in dimer form and maintains beta cell function and identity through NAD-dependent mechanisms. However, as eNAMPT levels rise, as in type 2 diabetes, structure-functional changes occur resulting in marked elevation of monomeric eNAMPT, which induces a diabetic phenotype in pancreatic islets. Strategies to selectively target monomeric eNAMPT could represent promising therapeutic strategies for the treatment of type 2 diabetes
Hybrid Mass Spectrometry Methods Reveal Lot-to-Lot Differences and Delineate the Effects of Glycosylation on the Structure of Herceptin®
To consider the
measurable variations in biopharmaceuticals we use mass spectrometry and systematically
evaluate three lots of Herceptin®, two mAb standards and an intact Fc-hinge
fragment. Each mAb is examined in three states; glycan intact, truncated (following
endoS2 treatment) and fully deglycosylated. Despite equivalence at the protein level, each
lot of Herceptin® gives a distinctive signature in three different mass
spectrometry analyses. Ion mobility mass
spectrometry (IM-MS) shows that in the API, the attached N-glycans reduce the
conformational spread of each mAb by 10.5 – 25 %. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange
mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) data supports this, with lower global deuterium
uptake in solution when comparing intact to the fully deglycosylated protein. HDX-MS
and activated IM-MS map the influence of glycans on the mAb and reveal
allosteric effects which extend far beyond the Fc domains into the Fab region. Taken
together these findings, and the supplied interactive data sets could be used
to provide acceptance criteria with application for MS based characterisation of
biosimilars and novel therapeutic mAbs. </p
Hybrid Mass Spectrometry Methods Reveal Lot-to-Lot Differences and Delineate the Effects of Glycosylation on the Structure of Herceptin®
<p>To consider the
measurable variations in biopharmaceuticals we use mass spectrometry and systematically
evaluate three lots of Herceptin®, two mAb standards and an intact Fc-hinge
fragment. Each mAb is examined in three states; glycan intact, truncated (following
endoS2 treatment) and fully deglycosylated. Despite equivalence at the protein level, each
lot of Herceptin® gives a distinctive signature in three different mass
spectrometry analyses. Ion mobility mass
spectrometry (IM-MS) shows that in the API, the attached N-glycans reduce the
conformational spread of each mAb by 10.5 – 25 %. Hydrogen/deuterium exchange
mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) data supports this, with lower global deuterium
uptake in solution when comparing intact to the fully deglycosylated protein. HDX-MS
and activated IM-MS map the influence of glycans on the mAb and reveal
allosteric effects which extend far beyond the Fc domains into the Fab region. Taken
together these findings, and the supplied interactive data sets could be used
to provide acceptance criteria with application for MS based characterisation of
biosimilars and novel therapeutic mAbs. </p