| Literature DB >> 32476063 |
Ramsey Saleem1, Greg Cantin1, Mats Wikström1, Glen Bolton1, Scott Kuhns1, Helen J McBride1, Jennifer Liu2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: ABP 710 has been developed as a biosimilar to infliximab reference product (RP). The objective of this study was to assess analytical similarity (structural and functional) between ABP 710 and infliximab RP licensed by the United States Food and Drug Administration (infliximab [US]) and the European Union (infliximab [EU]), using sensitive, state-of-the-art analytical methods capable of detecting minor differences in product quality attributes.Entities:
Keywords: ABP 710; biological function; biosimilar; infliximab; physicochemical structure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32476063 PMCID: PMC7261735 DOI: 10.1007/s11095-020-02816-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Res ISSN: 0724-8741 Impact factor: 4.200
Similarity Testing Plan and the Analytical Methods for the Structural and Functional Characterization of the Proposed Biosimilar ABP 710 and Infliximab Reference Products
| General properties | Protein content by gravimetric analysis |
| Reconstituted protein concentration by UV absorbance | |
| Reconstitution time | |
| Primary structure and post-translational modifications | Intact molecular mass analysis |
| Reduced and deglycosylated molecular masses of HC and LC | |
| Protein sequence by reduced peptide map | |
| Reduced peptide map, post-translational modifications: levels of deamidation and oxidation | |
| Disulfide structure by nonreduced peptide map | |
| Glycan map by HILIC | |
| Isoelectric point by capillary isoelectric focusing | |
| Identity by anti-idiotype ELISA | |
| Higher order structure | Secondary structure by FTIR spectroscopy |
| Tertiary structure by NUV-CD spectroscopy | |
| Conformation and thermal stability by DSC | |
| Product-related substances and impurities | Size variants by SE-UHPLC, rCE-SDS, and nrCE-SDS |
| Charge variants by CEX-HPLC and CEX-HPLC after carboxypeptidase B treatment | |
| Particles and aggregates | Subvisible particles by HIAC and MFI |
| Submicron particles by FFF and DLS | |
| Solution state size distribution by SV-AUC | |
| Molar mass of size variants by SE-HPLC-LS | |
| Biological activity | Inhibition of sTNFα-induced apoptosis in U937 |
| Binding to sTNFα by ELISA | |
| Binding to sTNFα by SPR | |
| Binding kinetics to sTNFα by SPR | |
| Inhibition of sTNFα-induced IL-8 release in HUVEC | |
| Inhibition of sTNFα-induced cell death in L929 | |
| Binding to mbTNFα on CHO MT-3 cells by imaging cytometry | |
| Reverse signaling in Jurkat mbTNFα line | |
| Binding to LTα by SPR | |
| Inhibition of LTα-induced IL-8 release in HUVEC | |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa (158V) by SPR | |
| Binding kinetics to FcγRIIIa (158V) by SPR | |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa (158F) by SPR | |
| Binding to primary NK cells by FACS | |
| NK92 ADCC activity | |
| PBMC ADCC activity | |
| Binding to C1q by ELISA | |
| CDC activity | |
| Binding to FcγRIIa (131R) by SPR | |
| ADCP activity | |
| Binding to FcγRIa by AlphaLISA | |
| Binding to FcγRIIb by SPR | |
| Binding to FcγRIIIb by SPR | |
| Binding to FcRn by AlphaScreen | |
| Binding to FcRn by SPR | |
| Thermal stability and forced degradation | Reconstituted forced degradation study at 40°C |
| Lyophilized stressed degradation study at 40°C | |
| Lyophilized accelerated degradation study at 25°C assessedby purity and potency assays |
ADCC antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity, ADCP antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis, SV-AUC sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation, CDC complement-dependent cytotoxicity, CEX-HPLC cation exchange high performance liquid chromatography, CHO Chinese Hamster Ovary cell, cIEF,capillary isoelectric focusing, C1q the first subcomponent of the C1 complex of the classical pathway of complement activation, DLS dynamic light scattering, DSCdifferential scanning calorimetry, ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, FACS fluorescence-activated cell sorting, FcR fragment crystallizable receptor, FcγRIaFc gamma receptor Type Ia, FcγRIIa Fc gamma receptor Type IIa, FcγRIIb Fc gamma receptor Type IIb, FcγRIIIa Fc gamma receptor Type IIIa, FcγRIIIb Fc gammareceptor Type IIIb, FcRn neonatal Fc receptor, FFF field flow fractionation, FTIR Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, HC heavy chain, HCP host cell protein,HIAC high accuracy light obscuration, HILIC hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, UHPLC untra high performance liquid chromatography HPLC highperformance liquid chromatography, HUVEC human umbilical vein cells, LC light chain, mbTNF membrane bound tumor necrosis factor, MFI micro-flow imaging,NUV-CD near-ultraviolet circular dichroism, nrCE-SDS non-reduced capillary electrophoresis–sodium dodecyl sulfate, PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell,rCE-SDS reduced capillary electrophoresis–sodium dodecyl sulfate, SE-HPLC-SLS size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography with light scattering, SE-HPLC size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography, SPR surface plasmon resonance, sTNF soluble tumor necrosis factor
Fig. 1Primary structure assessment of infliximab (EU), ABP 710, and infliximab (US) (a) Intact molecular mass. Identified peaks are reported in Table II; (b) Reduced tryptic peptide map; (c) HILIC glycan map.
Analytical Similarity Assessment between ABP 710 and Infliximab
| Intact molecular weight (ppma) | |||
| Peak A: A1G0F:A2G0F, 148,310 Da | 5 (1) | 5 (1) | 0 (1) |
| Peak B: A2G0F:A2G0F, 148,514 Da | 2 (1) | 11 (1) | 6 (1) |
| Peak C. A2G0F:A2G0F + 1 K, 148642 Da | 3 (1) | 21 (1) | 20 (1) |
| Peak D: A2G0F:A2G1F, 148,676 Da | 5 (1) | 12 (1) | 13 (1) |
| Peak E: A2G0F:A2G0F + 2 K, 148770 Da | 10 (1) | 8 (1) | 5 (1) |
| Peak F: A2G0F:A2G1F + 1 K, 148804 Da | 10 (1) | 16 (1) | 18 (1) |
| Peak G: A2G1F:A2G1F or A2G0F:A2G2F, 148,838 Da | 7 (1) | 29 (1) | 20 (1) |
| Peak H: A2G0F:A2G1F + 2 K, 148932 Da | 9 (1) | 8 (1) | 2 (1) |
| Peak I: A2G1F:A2G1F or A2G0F:A2G2F + 2 K, 149094 Da | 0 (1) | 10 (1) | 3 (1) |
| Reduced and deglycosylated HC, 49389 Da | 4 (1) | 17 (1) | 22 (1) |
| Reduced and deglycosylated HC + K, 49517 Da | 4 (1) | 24 (1) | 18 (1) |
| Reduced and deglycosylated LC, 23439 Da | 3 (1) | 26 (1) | 27 (1) |
| Glycan Map (%) | |||
| High Mannose | 3.2–4.2 (14) | 3.0–5.5 (28) | 3.1–5.5 (20) |
| Afucosylation | 6.1–7.3 (14) | 6.7–11.1 (28) | 6.9–10.9 (20) |
| β-galactosylation | 25.1–34.2 (14) | 25.9–52.0 (28) | 25.7–51.2 (20) |
| α-galactosylation | N/A | 1.6–6.6 (28) | 1.5–6.1 (20) |
| Sialylation | 0.9–1.6 (14) | 3.1–10.0 (28) | 4.1–9.7 (20) |
| Isoelectric point | 7.4 (1) | 7.4 (1) | 7.4 (1) |
| FTIR/spectral similarity (%) | |||
| US RP | 99.7–99.8 (6) | 99.7–100 (3) | 99.7–99.9 (3) |
| EU RP | 99.6–99.9 (6) | 99.7–99.9 (3) | 99.6–100 (3) |
| NUV-CD/spectral similarity (%) | |||
| US RP | 97.5–99.1 (6) | 98.9–100 (3) | 98.7–99.2 (3) |
| EU RP | 97.1–99.3 (6) | 98.2–98.7(3) | 98.3–100 (3) |
| DSC (°C) | |||
| Tm1 | 67.7–67.9 (9) | 67.6–67.8 (6) | 67.6–67.8 (6) |
| Tm2 | 83.3–84.3 (9) | 83.3–84.2 (6) | 83.2–84.3 (6) |
| Size Variants by SE-UHPLC (%) | |||
| Main Peak | 98.6–99.2 (12) | 99.3–99.8 (28) | 99.5–99.8 (19) |
| Size Variants by rCE-SDS | |||
| Heavy Chain + Light Chain | 96.6–97.3 (12) | 98.2–98.9 (28) | 98.4–98.9 (19) |
| Fragments | 0.7–1.0 (12) | 0.3–1.1 (28) | 0.4–0.8 (19) |
| Non-glycosylated heavy chain | 1.6–2.1 (12) | 0.4–0.6 (28) | 0.4–0.6 (19) |
| Size Variants by nrCE-SDS | |||
| Main Peak | 97.1–98.1 (12) | 97.8–98.9 (28) | 98.4–98.9 (12) |
| Charge Variants by CEX-UHPLC | |||
| Main Peak | 43.5–47.7 (12) | 31.7–51.7 (28) | 37.2–45.4(18) |
| Acidic Peaks | 19.5–23.6 (12) | 9.9–15.8 (28) | 9.6–17.7 (18) |
| Basic Peaks | 30.0–36.1 (12) | 34.2–56.2 (28) | 40.5–53.2 (18) |
| HIAC subvisible particle (particles/mL) | |||
| ≥ 2 μm | 40–569 (19) | 4568–7064 (7) | 3782–14,353 (7) |
| ≥ 5 μm | 5–138 (19) | 724–1341 (7) | 675–3138 (7) |
| ≥ 10 μm | 0–39 (19) | 64–172 (7) | 82–315 (7) |
| ≥ 25 μm | 0–2 (19) | 0–3 (7) | 1–3 (7) |
| MFI subvisible particle (particles/mL) | |||
| ≥ 5 μm particles | 19–1260 (19) | 952–3263 (7) | 758–6047 (7) |
| ≥ 5 μm non-spherical particles | 12–260 (19) | 328–1940 (7) | 384–3425 (7) |
| SV-AUC/monomer (%) | 98.4–99.4 (3) | 98.8–99.7 (3) | 99.1–99.9 (3) |
| SE-HPLC-LS MW (kDa) | |||
| Monomer | 150–151 (3) | 151–152 (3) | 151–152 (3) |
| Dimer | 284–287 (3) | 292–319 (3) | 285–334 (3) |
| Reconstituted protein concentration (mg/mL) | 9.1–9.6 (19) | 9.2–9.8 (26) | 9.1–9.7 (18) |
| Protein content (mg) | 96–99 (19) | 97–102 (26) | 96–101 (18) |
n = number of lots tested
appm = 1,000,000 x |(observed mass - theoretical mass)|/theoretical mass
Glycosylation status of observed monoclonal antibody species: A = number of antenna (GlcNAc) on trimannosyl core; F = Fucose; G = linked galactose on antenna; HC heavy chain, K = C-terminal lysine. LC light chain
Reconstituted protein concentration and protein content determined from 100 mg vial
SV-AUC sedimentation velocity analytical ultracentrifugation, CEX-UHPLC cation exchange ultra-high performance liquid chromatography, DSC differential scan-ning calorimetry, FTIR Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, HC heavy chain, LC light chain, MFI micro-flow imaging, NUV-CD near-UV circular dichroism, nrCE-SDS non-reduced capillary electrophoresis–sodium dodecyl sulfate, NGHC non-glycosylated heavy chain, rCE-SDS reduced capillary electrophoresis–sodium dodecyl sulfate, RP reference product, SE-UHPLC size exclusion untra high performance liquid chromatography, SE-HPLC-LS size exclusion high performance liquid chromatography with light scattering
Summary of Biological Activity Attributes for ABP 710, Infliximab (US), and Infliximab (EU)
| Inhibition of sTNFα-induced apoptosis in U937 (potency) (%) | 87–112 (14) | 78–117 (28) | 89–118 (19) |
| Binding to sTNFα by ELISA (%) | 88–109 (14) | 88–112 (25) | 98–104 (16) |
| Binding to sTNFα by SPR (%) | 92–109 (10) | 90–105 (10) | 89–103 (10) |
| Binding kinetics to sTNFα by SPR (Kd, pM) | 113–135 (6) | 110–144 (6) | 117–142 (6) |
| Inhibition of sTNFα-induced IL-8 release in HUVEC (%) | 97–102 (3) | 98–116 (3) | 92–101 (3) |
| Inhibition of sTNFα-induced cell death in L929 (%) | 94–104 (3) | 100–119 (3) | 92–98 (3) |
| Binding to mbTNFα on CHO MT-3 cells by imaging cytometry (%) | 92–108 (14) | 91–114 (25) | 97–113 (16) |
| Reverse signaling in Jurkat mbTNFα cell line (%) | 95–109 (14) | 90–114 (24) | 96–107 (16) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa (158V) by SPR (%) | 98–117 (10) | 82–105 (10) | 89–110 (10) |
| Binding kinetics to FcγRIIIa (158V) by SPR (Kd, nM) | 68–80 (10) | 63–93 (10) | 59–89 (10) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIa (158F) by SPR (%) | 88–119 (10) | 86–108 (10) | 87–106 (10) |
| NK92 ADCC activity (%) | 94–-133 (14) | 80–169 (27) | 100–166 (20) |
| PBMC ADCC activity (%) | 90–118 (10) | 82–119 (10) | 86–41 (10) |
| Binding to C1q by ELISA (%) | 83–104 (14) | 60–93 (25) | 61–95 (17) |
| CDC activity (%) | 93–110 (14) | 93–136 (27) | 93–135 (19) |
| Binding to FcγRIIa (131R) by SPR | 101–104 (3) | 98–99 (3) | 100–105 (3) |
| ADCP activity | 97–104 (3) | 94–116 (3) | 95–106 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIa by AlphaLISA | 92–99 (3) | 92–95 (3) | 92–101 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIIb by SPR | 91–105 (3) | 91–99 (3) | 96–110 (3) |
| Binding to FcγRIIIb by SPR | 96–117 (10) | 91–111 (10) | 87–106 (10) |
| Binding to FcRn by AlphaScreen (%) | 90–123 (14) | 92–108 (27) | 87–112 (20) |
| Binding to FcRn by SPR (%) | 91–109 (10) | 93–134 (10) | 84–137 (10) |
n = number of lots tested; all relative activity (%) was calculated against ABP 710 reference standard lot
ADCC antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity; ADCP antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis; CDC complement-dependent cytotoxicity; CHO Chinese Hamster Ovary cell; FcRn Fc neonatal receptor; ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HUVEC human umbilical vein cells; infliximab (EU) European Union-authorized infliximab; infliximab (US) United States Food and Drug Administration-licensed infliximab; mbTNF membrane bound tumor necrosis factor; n number of batches; PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell; SPR surface plasmon resonance; sTNF soluble tumor necrosis factor; TNF tumor necrosis factor; TNFα tumor necrosis factor-α
Fig. 2Higher order structural assessment of infliximab (EU), ABP 710, and infliximab (US). (a) Second derivative FTIR spectra; (b) NUV CD spectra; (c) DSC thermograms.
Fig. 3Charge variant assessment of infliximab (EU), ABP 710, and infliximab (US) by CEX-HPLC. (a) Untreated; (b) carboxypeptidase B digested.
Fig. 4Functional assessment of Fab-mediated activities for ABP 710, infliximab (US) and infliximab (EU). (a) Inhibition of sTNFα-induced apoptosis in U937 (potency); (b) binding to sTNFα by ELISA; (c) reverse signaling; (d) binding to mbTNFα on CHO MT-3 cells by imaging cytometry; Individual data points, the mean, and ± one standard deviation are shown.
Fig. 5Functional assessment of Fc-mediated activities for ABP 710, infliximab (US) and infliximab (EU). (a) NK92 ADCC activity; (b) CDC activity; (c) ADCP activity; (d) binding to FcRn by AlphaScreen; Individual data points, the mean, and ± one standard deviation are shown.
Fig. 6Similarity assessment of the specificity of ABP 710 and infliximab RP. (a) Binding of LTα using SPR; (b) inhibition of LTα-induced IL-8 release in HUVEC by ABP 710 and infliximab RP.
Fig. 7Thermal stability and forced degradation of ABP 710 and infliximab RP. Fragmentation (LMW + MMW) results by rCE-SDS are shown for (a) accelerated thermal stability at 25°C; (b) stressed thermal stability at 40°C; and (c) reconstituted drug product at 40°C. Acidic charge variants results by CEX-HPLC are shown for (d) accelerated thermal stability at 25°C; (e) stressed thermal stability at 40°C; and (f) reconstituted drug product at 40°C.