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Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach

Sequence variants in recombinant biopharmaceuticals may have a relevant and unpredictable impact on clinical safety and efficacy. Hence, their sensitive analysis is important throughout bioprocess development. The two stage analytical approach presented here provides a quick multi clone comparison o...

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Autores principales: Zeck, Anne, Regula, Jörg Thomas, Larraillet, Vincent, Mautz, Björn, Popp, Oliver, Göpfert, Ulrich, Wiegeshoff, Frank, Vollertsen, Ulrike E. E., Gorr, Ingo H., Koll, Hans, Papadimitriou, Apollon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3391300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22792284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040328
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author Zeck, Anne
Regula, Jörg Thomas
Larraillet, Vincent
Mautz, Björn
Popp, Oliver
Göpfert, Ulrich
Wiegeshoff, Frank
Vollertsen, Ulrike E. E.
Gorr, Ingo H.
Koll, Hans
Papadimitriou, Apollon
author_facet Zeck, Anne
Regula, Jörg Thomas
Larraillet, Vincent
Mautz, Björn
Popp, Oliver
Göpfert, Ulrich
Wiegeshoff, Frank
Vollertsen, Ulrike E. E.
Gorr, Ingo H.
Koll, Hans
Papadimitriou, Apollon
author_sort Zeck, Anne
collection PubMed
description Sequence variants in recombinant biopharmaceuticals may have a relevant and unpredictable impact on clinical safety and efficacy. Hence, their sensitive analysis is important throughout bioprocess development. The two stage analytical approach presented here provides a quick multi clone comparison of candidate production cell lines as a first stage, followed by an in-depth analysis including identification and quantitation of aberrant sequence variants of selected clones as a second stage. We show that the differential analysis is a suitable tool for sensitive and fast batch to batch comparison of recombinant proteins. The optimized approach allows for detection of not only single amino acid substitutions in unmodified peptides, but also substitutions in posttranslational modified peptides such as glycopeptides, for detection of truncated or elongated sequence variants as well as double amino acid substitutions or substitution with amino acid structural isomers within one peptide. In two case studies we were able to detect sequence variants of different origin down to a sub percentage level. One of the sequence variants (Thr → Asn) could be correlated to a cytosine to adenine substitution at DNA( desoxyribonucleic acid) level. In the second case we were able to correlate the sub percentage substitution (Phe → Tyr) to amino acid limitation in the chemically defined fermentation medium.
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spelling pubmed-33913002012-07-12 Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach Zeck, Anne Regula, Jörg Thomas Larraillet, Vincent Mautz, Björn Popp, Oliver Göpfert, Ulrich Wiegeshoff, Frank Vollertsen, Ulrike E. E. Gorr, Ingo H. Koll, Hans Papadimitriou, Apollon PLoS One Research Article Sequence variants in recombinant biopharmaceuticals may have a relevant and unpredictable impact on clinical safety and efficacy. Hence, their sensitive analysis is important throughout bioprocess development. The two stage analytical approach presented here provides a quick multi clone comparison of candidate production cell lines as a first stage, followed by an in-depth analysis including identification and quantitation of aberrant sequence variants of selected clones as a second stage. We show that the differential analysis is a suitable tool for sensitive and fast batch to batch comparison of recombinant proteins. The optimized approach allows for detection of not only single amino acid substitutions in unmodified peptides, but also substitutions in posttranslational modified peptides such as glycopeptides, for detection of truncated or elongated sequence variants as well as double amino acid substitutions or substitution with amino acid structural isomers within one peptide. In two case studies we were able to detect sequence variants of different origin down to a sub percentage level. One of the sequence variants (Thr → Asn) could be correlated to a cytosine to adenine substitution at DNA( desoxyribonucleic acid) level. In the second case we were able to correlate the sub percentage substitution (Phe → Tyr) to amino acid limitation in the chemically defined fermentation medium. Public Library of Science 2012-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3391300/ /pubmed/22792284 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040328 Text en Zeck et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zeck, Anne
Regula, Jörg Thomas
Larraillet, Vincent
Mautz, Björn
Popp, Oliver
Göpfert, Ulrich
Wiegeshoff, Frank
Vollertsen, Ulrike E. E.
Gorr, Ingo H.
Koll, Hans
Papadimitriou, Apollon
Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title_full Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title_fullStr Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title_full_unstemmed Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title_short Low Level Sequence Variant Analysis of Recombinant Proteins: An Optimized Approach
title_sort low level sequence variant analysis of recombinant proteins: an optimized approach
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3391300/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22792284
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0040328
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