| Literature DB >> 26147246 |
Christian Wenz1, Coral Barbas2, Ángeles López-Gonzálvez2, Antonia Garcia2, Fernando Benavente3, Victoria Sanz-Nebot3, Tim Blanc4, Gordon Freckleton4, Philip Britz-McKibbin5, Meera Shanmuganathan5, Francois de l'Escaille6, Johann Far7, Rob Haselberg8,9, Sean Huang10, Carolin Huhn11, Martin Pattky11, David Michels12, Si Mou12, Feng Yang12, Christian Neusuess13, Nora Tromsdorf13, Edward E K Baidoo14, Jay D Keasling14, SungAe Suhr Park15.
Abstract
A collaborative study on the robustness and portability of a capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry method for peptide mapping was performed by an international team, consisting of 13 independent laboratories from academia and industry. All participants used the same batch of samples, reagents and coated capillaries to run their assays, whereas they utilized the capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry equipment available in their laboratories. The equipment used varied in model, type and instrument manufacturer. Furthermore, different types of sheath-flow capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry interfaces were used. Migration time, peak height and peak area of ten representative target peptides of trypsin-digested bovine serum albumin were determined by every laboratory on two consecutive days. The data were critically evaluated to identify outliers and final values for means, repeatability (precision within a laboratory) and reproducibility (precision between laboratories) were established. For relative migration time the repeatability was between 0.05 and 0.18% RSD and the reproducibility between 0.14 and 1.3% RSD. For relative peak area repeatability and reproducibility values obtained were 3-12 and 9-29% RSD, respectively. These results demonstrate that capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry is robust enough to allow a method transfer across multiple laboratories and should promote a more widespread use of peptide mapping and other capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry applications in biopharmaceutical analysis and related fields.Entities:
Keywords: Precision; Repeatability; Reproducibility; System suitability test; Tryptic digest
Year: 2015 PMID: 26147246 DOI: 10.1002/jssc.201500551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sep Sci ISSN: 1615-9306 Impact factor: 3.645