| Literature DB >> 29553864 |
Neungseon Seo1, Alla Polozova2, Mingxuan Zhang2, Zachary Yates2, Shawn Cao3, Huimin Li3, Scott Kuhns3, Gwendolyn Maher3, Helen J McBride1, Jennifer Liu1.
Abstract
ABP 215 is a biosimilar product to bevacizumab. Bevacizumab acts by binding to vascular endothelial growth factor A, inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation and new blood vessel formation, thereby leading to tumor vasculature normalization. The ABP 215 analytical similarity assessment was designed to assess the structural and functional similarity of ABP 215 and bevacizumab sourced from both the United States (US) and the European Union (EU). Similarity assessment was also made between the US- and EU-sourced bevacizumab to assess the similarity between the two products. The physicochemical properties and structural similarity of ABP 215 and bevacizumab were characterized using sensitive state-of-the-art analytical techniques capable of detecting small differences in product attributes. ABP 215 has the same amino acid sequence and exhibits similar post-translational modification profiles compared to bevacizumab. The functional similarity assessment employed orthogonal assays designed to interrogate all expected biological activities, including those known to affect the mechanisms of action for ABP 215 and bevacizumab. More than 20 batches of bevacizumab (US) and bevacizumab (EU), and 13 batches of ABP 215 representing unique drug substance lots were assessed for similarity. The large dataset allows meaningful comparisons and garners confidence in the overall conclusion for the analytical similarity assessment of ABP 215 to both US- and EU-sourced bevacizumab. The structural and purity attributes, and biological properties of ABP 215 are demonstrated to be highly similar to those of bevacizumab.Entities:
Keywords: ABP 215; analytical similarity assessment; bevacizumab; biosimilar; function; structure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29553864 PMCID: PMC5973752 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2018.1452580
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857
Similarity testing plan and the analytical methods for the structural and functional characterization of the proposed biosimilar ABP 215 and bevacizumab reference products.
| Category | Analytical Technique |
|---|---|
| Primary Structure | Molecular mass of intact whole protein |
| Molecular mass of reduced and deglycosylated HC and LC | |
| Protein sequence by reduced peptide map | |
| Disulfide structure by non-reduced peptide map | |
| N-glycan map by HILIC HPLC | |
| Extinction coefficient by amino acid analysis | |
| Isoelectric point by cIEF | |
| Identity by anti-idiotype ELISA | |
| Higher Order Structure | Secondary structure by FTIR |
| Tertiary structure by near UV-CD | |
| Thermal stability by DSC | |
| Particles and Aggregates | Subvisible particles by light obscuration |
| Subvisible particles by MFI | |
| Submicron particle profile by DLS | |
| Submicron particle profile by FFF | |
| Aggregates by AUC-SV | |
| Aggregates by SE-HPLC-LS | |
| Product-related Substances and Impurities | Size variants by SE-HPLC, rCE-SDS and nrCE-SDS |
| Charge variants by CEX-HPLC | |
| Thermal Forced Degradation | Thermal stability at 25, 40, and 50°C assessed by purity and potency |
| Biological Activity | VEGF-A binding (ELISA) |
| Proliferation inhibition bioassay (potency) | |
| VEGF-A binding kinetics and affinity | |
| Binding to VEGF-A isoforms | |
| Inhibition of VEGFR-2 RTK autophosphorylation | |
| Specificity by VEGFR-2 RTK autophosphorylation | |
| FcRn binding | |
| FcγRIa binding | |
| FcγRIIa binding | |
| FcγRIIb binding | |
| FcγRIIIa (158 V) binding | |
| FcγRIIIa (158 F) binding | |
| FcγRIIIb binding | |
| C1q binding | |
| Lack of ADCC activity | |
| Lack of CDC activity | |
| General Properties | Protein concentration and volume |
| Osmolality, pH, appearance, color, and clarity | |
| Process-Related Impurities | HCP by ELISA, 2D LC-MS, and 2D-DIGE |
| Residual protein A by ELISA | |
| Residual DNA analysis by qPCR |
Abbreviations: 2D-DIGE = 2-dimensional differential in-gel electrophoresis, 2D LC-MS = 2-dimensional liquid chromatography coupled with online mass spectrometry involving data-independent MS acquisition, ADCC = antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, AUC-SV = analytical ultracentrifugation sedimentation velocity, CDC = complement-dependent cytotoxicity, CEX-HPLC = cation exchange high performance liquid chromatography, cIEF = capillary isoelectric focusing, C1q = the first subcomponent of the C1 complex of the classical pathway of complement activation, DSC = differential scanning calorimetry, ELISA = enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, FcR = fragment crystallizable receptor, FcγRIa = Fc gamma receptor Type Ia, FcγRIIa = Fc gamma receptor Type IIa, FcγRIIb = Fc gamma receptor Type IIb, FcγRIIIa = Fc gamma receptor Type IIIa, FcγRIIIb = Fc gamma receptor Type IIIb, FcRn = neonatal Fc receptor, FFF = field flow fractionation, FTIR = Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, HC = heavy chain, HCP = host cell protein, HILIC = hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, HPLC = high performance liquid chromatography, LC = light chain, MFI = micro-flow imaging, nrCE-SDS = non-reduced capillary electrophoresis – sodium dodecyl sulfate, qPCR = quantitative polymerase chain reaction, rCE-SDS = reduced capillary electrophoresis – sodium dodecyl sulfate, SE-HPLC-LS = size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography with light scattering, SE-HPLC = size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography, UV-CD = ultraviolet circular dichroism, VEGF-A = vascular endothelial growth factor A.
Figure 1.Primary Structure: Comparison of ABP 215, Bevacizumab (US), and Bevacizumab (EU) Intact Molecular Mass Profile (a), reduced peptide map (b), and glycan map (c).
Summary of attributes for ABP 215, bevacizumab (US), and bevacizumab (EU).
| Analytical Testing/Attributes | ABP 215 Range (n) | Bevacizumab US Range (n) | Bevacizumab EU Range (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intact molecular weight (Da) | |||
| A: Glycosylation – A2G0F:A1G0F | 149008–149017 (4) | 149007–149015 (4) | 149009–149025 (4) |
| B: Glycosylation – A2G0F:A2G0F | 149210–149219 (4) | 149210–149218 (4) | 149209–149218 (4) |
| C: Glycosylation – A2G0F:A2G1F | 149371–149381 (4) | 149374–149378 (4) | 149373–149381 (4) |
| D: Glycosylation – A2G1F:A2G1F or A2G0F:A2G2F | 149536–149541 (4) | 149531–149535 (4) | 149531–149538 (4) |
| E: Glycosylation – A2G1F:A2G2F | 149694–149698 (4) | 149673–149698 (4) | 149663–149710 (4) |
| Reduced and deglycosylated heavy chain (Da) | 49744–49752 (4) | 49741–49753 (4) | 49742–49753 (4) |
| Reduced and deglycosylated light chain (Da) | 23479–23482 (4) | 23479–23481 (4) | 23479–23482 (4) |
| Glycosylation at Asn303 (%) | 99.2–99.4 (13) | 97.9–98.3 (24) | 97.9–98.4 (26) |
| Glycan map (%) | |||
| High mannose | 1.2–2.7 (13) | 0.3–1.3 (23) | 0.5–1.2 (25) |
| Afucosylation | 1.2–1.7 (13) | 1.7–3.8 (23) | 1.9–2.6 (25) |
| Galactosylation | 17.1–29.4 (13) | 8.7–21.8 (23) | 7.8–21.2 (25) |
| Sialic acid | 0.2–0.3 (13) | 0.1–0.2 (23) | 0.1–0.2 (25) |
| FTIR/spectral similarity (%) | |||
| US RP | 97.6–99.8 (6) | 97.9–99.3 (6) | 97.2–99.0 (6) |
| EU RP | 97.9–99.8 (6) | 98.3–99.7 (6) | 97.5–99.3 (6) |
| Near UV-CD/spectral similarity (%) | |||
| US RP | 98.5–99.4 (6) | 98.5–99.6 (6) | 97.3–99.4 (6) |
| EU RP | 97.1–99.4 (6) | 97.0–99.6 (6) | 97.6–99.5 (6) |
| DSC (°C) | |||
| Tm1 | 72.7–73.1 (11) | 72.6–73.1 (12) | 72.5–73.1 (12) |
| Tm2 | 83.2–83.7 (11) | 83.2–83.9 (12) | 83.0–84.0 (12) |
| LO subvisible particle (particles/container) | |||
| ≥ 2 µm | 320–5736 (19) | 48–4749 (14) | 77–15493 (15) |
| ≥ 5 µm | 48–1488 (19) | 14–755 (14) | 24–688 (15) |
| ≥ 10 µm | 16–219 (19) | 3–112 (14) | 8–224 (15) |
| ≥ 25 µm | 0–96 (19) | 0–32 (14) | 0–32 (15) |
| MFI subvisible particle (particles/mL) | |||
| ≥ 5 µm spherical particles | 16–218 (19) | 42–3439 (11) | 51–588 (12) |
| ≥ 5 µm non-spherical particles | 0–65 (19) | 6–2157 (11) | 8–430 (12) |
| AUC-SV/monomer (%) | 98.0–99.3 (6) | 97.3–98.6 (6) | 97.3–98.6 (6) |
| SE-HPLC-LS MW (kDa) | |||
| Monomer | 148 (3) | 148 (3) | 148 (3) |
| Dimer | 297–304 (3) | 300–301 (3) | 294–298 (3) |
| Protein concentration (mg/mL) | 24.4–25.8 (13) | 23.9–25.9 (24) | 24.5–25.8 (26) |
| Volume (mL) | |||
| 100 mg/4 mL | 4.1–4.3 (7) | 4.2–4.3 (6) | 4.3–4.7 (5) |
| 400 mg/16 mL | 16.3–16.5 (12) | 16.2–16.6 (6) | 16.3–16.8 (8) |
| CHO cell protein by ELISA (ng/mg) | 4–12 (13) | 6 (3) | 5–6 (3) |
n indicates a number of samples tested
Summary of functional attributes for ABP 215, bevacizumab (US), and bevacizumab (EU).
| Analytical Testing/Attributes | ABP 215 Range (n) | Bevacizumab US Range (n) | Bevacizumab EU Range (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition of proliferation (potency) (%) | 91–105 (13) | 86–104 (24) | 88–103 (25) |
| Relative VEGF-A binding (%) | 84–98 (13) | 80–104 (14) | 76–99 (13) |
| VEGF-A binding affinity (KD) | 20.1–23.5 (3) | 22.9–23.9 (3) | 18.4–23.4 (3) |
| Binding to FcRn (%) | 84–104 (13) | 91–107 (14) | 88–103 (14) |
| Binding to FcγRIa (%) | 90–98 (3) | 83–90 (3) | 99–102 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIIa (%) | 83–101 (3) | 89–91 (3) | 80–90 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIIb (%) | 92–98 (3) | 90–94 (3) | 87–91 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa, 158V (%) | 78–115 (13) | 77–98 (12) | 81–117 (17) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa, 158F (%) | 84–120 (13) | 80–110 (10) | 83–109 (10) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIb (%) | 89–92 (3) | 80–85 (3) | 67–88 (3) |
| Binding to C1q (%) | 91–122 (13) | 88–115 (10) | 90–104 (9) |
n indicates a number of samples tested
Figure 2.Physicochemical Properties of Size and Charge Variants, as Assessed by SE-HPLC (a), rCE-SDS (b), CEX-HPLC (c), and cIEF (d) for ABP 215 (□), bevacizumab (US) (∆), and bevacizumab (EU) (○).
Figure 3.Higher Order Structure: Comparison of ABP 215, Bevacizumab (US), and Bevacizumab (EU) Fourier-transform infrared spectra (a), ultraviolet circular dichroism spectra (b), and differential scanning calorimetry thermograms (c).
Figure 4.Particles and Aggregates: Comparison of ABP 215, Bevacizumab (US), and Bevacizumab (EU) submicron particle profiles by Field Flow Fractionation (a), dynamic light scattering (b), and aggregates by analytical ultracentrifugation-sedimentation velocity (c).
Figure 5.Size Exclusion High Performance Liquid Chromatography Profiles of ABP 215 and Bevacizumab Incubated at 50C for 14 days.
Figure 6.Inhibition of VEGFR-2 RTK autophosphorylation by ABP 215, bevacizumab (US), and bevacizumab (EU).