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Enabling adoption of 2D-NMR for the higher order structure assessment of monoclonal antibody therapeutics

Authors :
Peter Schmieder
Ryan M. Evans
Robert G. Brinson
Chad W. Lawrence
Kristian Schweimer
Yves Aubin
Ping Xu
Göran Widmalm
Andreas Blomgren
Hamish G. Grant
Anthony J. Kearsley
John P. Marino
Janez Plavec
John B. Jordan
Geneviève Gingras
Scott A. Bradley
Koichi Kato
Stuart Parnham
Patrick N. Reardon
John R. Cort
David W. Keizer
Edward R. Zartler
Feng Ni
Frank Delaglio
Gregor Ilc
Saeko Yanaka
David A. Keire
Jonas Ståhle
Mats Wikström
Luke W. Arbogast
Alfred Ross
Thea Suter-Stahel
Darón I. Freedberg
Ana Carolina de Mattos Zeri
Maurício L. Sforça
Nils Trieloff
Desiree Tsao
Torgny Rundlöf
Xinying Jia
Kang Chen
Ken Skidmore
Gregory K. Pierens
Houman Ghasriani
Donna M. Baldisseri
Carlos A. Amezcua
Mehdi Mobli
Julie Yu Wei
Christina M. Szabo
Gerhard Wider
Source :
mAbs
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Taylor & Francis, 2019.

Abstract

The increased interest in using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) as a platform for biopharmaceuticals has led to the need for new analytical techniques that can precisely assess physicochemical properties of these large and very complex drugs for the purpose of correctly identifying quality attributes (QA). One QA, higher order structure (HOS), is unique to biopharmaceuticals and essential for establishing consistency in biopharmaceutical manufacturing, detecting process-related variations from manufacturing changes and establishing comparability between biologic products. To address this measurement challenge, two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2D-NMR) methods were introduced that allow for the precise atomic-level comparison of the HOS between two proteins, including mAbs. Here, an inter-laboratory comparison involving 26 industrial, government and academic laboratories worldwide was performed as a benchmark using the NISTmAb, from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), to facilitate the translation of the 2D-NMR method into routine use for biopharmaceutical product development. Two-dimensional 1H,15N and 1H,13C NMR spectra were acquired with harmonized experimental protocols on the unlabeled Fab domain and a uniformly enriched-15N, 20%-13C-enriched system suitability sample derived from the NISTmAb. Chemometric analyses from over 400 spectral maps acquired on 39 different NMR spectrometers ranging from 500 MHz to 900 MHz demonstrate spectral fingerprints that are fit-for-purpose for the assessment of HOS. The 2D-NMR method is shown to provide the measurement reliability needed to move the technique from an emerging technology to a harmonized, routine measurement that can be generally applied with great confidence to high precision assessments of the HOS of mAb-based biotherapeutics.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
mAbs
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f183bde956423f5930af0c3d9a27c283