| Literature DB >> 24119751 |
Katja Heinig1, Thomas Wirz, Eginhard Schick, Alberto Guenzi.
Abstract
An acylated peptide with MW ~4.5 kDa was measured in samples from pharmacokinetic, toxicology and clinical studies using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Lower limits of quantitation of 2 ng/mL and 50 pg/mL were achieved for animal and human plasma, respectively. Repeated drug administration may lead to anti-drug antibodies (ADA) which can inactivate the drug by formation of drug-ADA complexes. Hence, the LC-MS/MS assay incorporated cleavage of potential drug-ADA complexes to quantify the total plasma concentration. To obtain information on active drug levels, an assay that measures the free concentration or alternatively the ADA-unbound concentration would be needed. Ultrafiltration experiments through 100 kD cutoff membranes to remove Ig-bound peptide were not successful due to nonspecific binding. Extraction of Ig-bound drug using Protein A or G (bacterial cell wall proteins with high affinity to the Fc region of IgG) was suitable to distinguish between ADA-bound drug and [free+protein bound (not ADA-bound)] drug and correlated with findings from ELISA ADA measurement.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-drug antibody; Free vs. total; Liquid-chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry; Peptide; Protein A/G; Ultrafiltration
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24119751 DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2013.09.073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Chromatogr A ISSN: 0021-9673 Impact factor: 4.759