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Universeel buffersysteem voor natieve LC-MS-analyse van antilichaamgebaseerde therapeutica

Ontwikkeling van een universeel buffersysteem voor natieve vloeistofchromatografie-massaspectrometrie-analyse van antilichaamgebaseerde therapeutica.

Abstract (original)

Liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is a powerful analytical technique for analyzing biological macromolecules. A long-standing challenge has been applying LC-MS at physiological pH under native conditions using volatile buffers. The predominant "buffer" used, ammonium acetate (AmAc, pKa 4.75 for acetic acid and 9.25 for ammonium), does not offer sufficient buffering capacity in the physiological pH range of 7.0-7.4. To address this, we evaluated a set of fluorinated ethylamines, 2-fluoroethylamine (MFEA), 2,2-difluoroethylamine (DFEA), and 2,2,2-trifluoroethylamine (TFEA), producing conjugate acids with pKa values of 8.9, 7.2, and 5.5, respectively, that together provide buffering across the 4.5-9.8 pH range. We show that protein separations on strong cation- and anion-exchange resins in these volatile mobile phases perform comparably to traditional nonvolatile buffers, with similar elution profiles and analyte elution ranking, albeit with slightly broader peaks. Using fully volatile gradients of pH or ionic strength, we chromatographically resolved charge variants of protein analytes such as mAbs and bovine serum albumin. For many of the eluting LC peaks, we obtained high-resolution mass spectra capable of resolving glycoforms of antibodies. Hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC) in volatile mobile phases preserved native separation order and further resolved drug-to-antibody ratio (DAR) species of the antibody-drug conjugate brentuximab-vedotin. For each chromatography modality we further compare innovator and biosimilar antibodies, demonstrating the reproducibility of results in the proposed volatile compounds. Together, our results establish fluorinated ethylamines, in combination with ammonium acetate, as a universal volatile buffer system for native LC-MS, broadly applicable across major chromatographic modalities.

Dit artikel is een samenvatting van een publicatie in Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry. Voor het volledige artikel, alle details en referenties verwijzen wij u naar de oorspronkelijke bron.

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DOI: 10.1021/jasms.6c00028