| Literature DB >> 25517308 |
Jan Stracke1, Thomas Emrich, Petra Rueger, Tilman Schlothauer, Lothar Kling, Alexander Knaupp, Hubert Hertenberger, Andreas Wolfert, Christian Spick, Wilma Lau, Georg Drabner, Ulrike Reiff, Hans Koll, Apollon Papadimitriou.
Abstract
Preserving the chemical and structural integrity of therapeutic antibodies during manufacturing and storage is a major challenge during pharmaceutical development. Oxidation of Fc methionines Met252 and Met428 is frequently observed, which leads to reduced affinity to FcRn and faster plasma clearance if present at high levels. Because oxidation occurs in both positions simultaneously, their individual contribution to the concomitant changes in pharmacokinetic properties has not been clearly established. A novel pH-gradient FcRn affinity chromatography method was applied to isolate three antibody oxidation variants from an oxidized IgG1 preparation based on their FcRn binding properties. Physico-chemical characterization revealed that the three oxidation variants differed predominantly in the number of oxMet252 per IgG (0, 1, or 2), but not significantly in the content of oxMet428. Corresponding to the increase in oxMet252 content, stepwise reduction of FcRn affinity in vitro, as well as faster clearance and shorter terminal half-life, in huFcRn-transgenic mice were observed. A single Met252 oxidation per antibody had no significant effect on pharmacokinetics (PK) compared with unmodified IgG. Importantly, only molecules with both heavy chains oxidized at Met252 exhibited significantly faster clearance. In contrast, Met428 oxidation had no apparent negative effect on PK and even led to somewhat improved FcRn binding and slower clearance. This minor effect, however, seemed to be abrogated by the dominant effect of Met252 oxidation. The novel approach of functional chromatographic separation of IgG oxidation variants followed by physico-chemical and biological characterization has yielded the first experimentally-backed explanation for the unaltered PK properties of antibody preparations containing relatively high Met252 and Met428 oxidation levels.Entities:
Keywords: AUC, area under the concentration-time curve; Antibody; ESI-MS, electrospray ionization mass spectrometry; Fab, antigen-binding fragment; Fc, crystallizable fragment; FcRn; FcRn, neonatal Fc receptor; HRP, horseradish peroxidase; IgG, immunoglobulin G; Met, methionine; Met252; Met428; PK, pharmacokinetic; RU, response units; SEC, size exclusion chromatography; SPR, surface plasmon resonance; affinity chromatography; column; degradation; m/z, mass-to-charge ratio; mAb, monoclonal antibody; methionine oxidation; neonatal Fc receptor; pH gradient; pharmacokinetics
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25517308 PMCID: PMC4622569 DOI: 10.4161/mabs.29601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857
Figure 3.(A) Schematic illustration of sample preparation of five mAb1-derived samples for further characterization. (B) FcRn chromatogram of untreated mAb1. (C) FcRn chromatogram of mAb1_Ox; the three separated peaks were individually collected and pooled as indicated by the gray rectangles.
Figure 5.ESI-MS analysis results of plasmin-digested samples: (1) mAb1, (2) mAb1_Ox, (3) mAb1_Ox_main peak, (4) mAb1_Ox_prepeak I, (5) mAb1_Ox_prepeak II. Signals in the mass spectra represent number of methionine oxidations (indicated by dotted lines and italic numbers; +16 Da for each oxidation) in the intact Fc (minimum 0, maximum 4 oxMet per Fc). The sketch shows the resulting fragment after plasmin digest: Disulfide-linked, intact Fc with 4 potential oxMets.
Summary of sample characterization results
| Sample | Peptide Map | Plasmin digest/ ESI-MS | |
|---|---|---|---|
| oxMet252 [%] | oxMet428 [%] | No. oxMet per Fc | |
| 1: mAb1 | 5 | 2 | 0, 1 |
| 2: mAb1_Ox | 41 | 28 | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 |
| 3: mAb1_Ox_main peak | 3 | 20 | 0, 1, 2 |
| 4: mAb1_Ox_prepeak I | 50 | 23 | 1, 2, 3 |
| 5: mAb1_Ox_prepeak II | 90 | 42 | 2, 3, 4 |
Note: Left column: Sample names. Middle column: Total oxMet252 and ox Met428 levels from tryptic LC-MS peptide map analysis. Right column: Numbers of oxMet per Fc (minimum 0, maximum 4 oxMet) from LC-ESI-MS analysis of plasmin-digested samples.
Figure 6.FcRn chromatogram of mAb1_Ox with the relative peak areas of the 3 separated peaks. Arrows indicate the mAb1 oxidation variants in the 3 peaks according to the results of LC-MS peptide map and plasmin digest/ESI-MS analysis.
Figure 8.Pharmacokinetic analysis in huFcRn-transgenic mice. (A) Serum concentration over time after single bolus injection. Samples: (1) mAb1, (2) mAb1_Ox, (3) mAb1_Ox_main peak, (4) mAb1_Ox_prepeak I, (5) mAb1_Ox_prepeak II. (B) Bar diagram of plasma clearance. Corresponding clearance and terminal half-life values for all 5 indicated samples are given in the table above the graph.
Scheme 1.Relative distribution of all 10 mAb1 methionine oxidation variants in mAb1_Ox. Due to the homodimeric structure of IgG, the oxidation hotspots are present in duplicate. Relative values from the theoretical simulation are compared with experimentally derived values. Clearance for the 3 Met252 oxidation variants is compared with mAb1 control.1 Relative peak areas in mAb1_Ox FcRn chromatogram (Fig. 6.)2 According to peptide map and plasmin digest/ESI-MS analysis (Table 1, Figure 6.)3 Simulation for 41% oxMet252 (acc. to Ionescu et al.23); reaction rates koxMet252 = 0.19 h−1 and koxMet428 = 0.09 h−1 (acc. to Pan et al.9).4 Assuming binomial distribution of oxMet428 vs Met428 within the 3 isolated peaks, the variant distribution in mAb1_Ox can be calculated from the total oxMet428 content (peptide map) and the rel. peak areas (Table 1 and Figure 6). For example, for variant mAb1_Ox_main peak_oxMet428/Met428 (in bold): 2 (HC isomers, one oxMet428 on left or on right HC) x 0.2 (oxMet428 content in mAb1_Ox_main peak) x 0.8 (Met428 content in mAb1_Ox_main peak) x 0.3 (rel. peak area of mAb1_Ox_main peak in FcRn chromatogram) x 100 = ∼10%.