Improving Routine Analysis of Insulin Analogues Using the ACQUITY QDa Detector
Applications | 2017 | WatersInstrumentation
The analysis of insulin analogues is essential in biopharmaceutical QC to ensure accurate identification, purity assessment and biosimilar comparability of these closely related proteins.
This study demonstrates an LC-UV/MS workflow using the ACQUITY QDa Detector to improve routine analysis of insulin analogues, focusing on purity, comparability and identity testing across multiple commercial samples.
An optimized UPLC method was developed for intact insulin analysis and peptide mapping following USP monograph protocols with modifications for MS compatibility. Intact proteins (0.35 mg/mL) were separated on a CSH C18 column at 60 °C, using a 20 min gradient (20–30% B) with 0.1% formic acid in water (A) and acetonitrile (B). Digestion for peptide mapping employed Glu-C at 37 °C, with a scaled 15 min gradient on a peptide column.
Impurity assessment by intact analysis showed improved resolution of insulin and m-cresol, with up to 8-fold higher SNR for low-abundance impurities using MS detection versus UV. Comparability testing of three insulin sources revealed identical retention but distinct molecular weights (5808 Da vs. 5823 Da) and differing impurity profiles, highlighting MS specificity. Peptide mapping identified characteristic fragments (F1–F4); sequence variants in Sample 3 (N→K, KT→E) altered retention and confirmed by mass shifts, supporting molecular-level identity testing.
Further integration of low-cost MS detectors in routine QC, automation of LC-MS workflows, expansion to other biotherapeutics and incorporation of advanced data analysis and real-time monitoring are expected to advance biopharma analytics.
The ACQUITY QDa Detector combined with UPLC provides a robust, efficient and regulatory-ready workflow for enhanced analysis of insulin analogues, improving detection of impurities, ensuring accurate identity tests and supporting biosimilar comparability in quality control.
HPLC, LC/MS, LC/SQ
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The analysis of insulin analogues is essential in biopharmaceutical QC to ensure accurate identification, purity assessment and biosimilar comparability of these closely related proteins.
Study Objectives and Overview
This study demonstrates an LC-UV/MS workflow using the ACQUITY QDa Detector to improve routine analysis of insulin analogues, focusing on purity, comparability and identity testing across multiple commercial samples.
Methodology
An optimized UPLC method was developed for intact insulin analysis and peptide mapping following USP monograph protocols with modifications for MS compatibility. Intact proteins (0.35 mg/mL) were separated on a CSH C18 column at 60 °C, using a 20 min gradient (20–30% B) with 0.1% formic acid in water (A) and acetonitrile (B). Digestion for peptide mapping employed Glu-C at 37 °C, with a scaled 15 min gradient on a peptide column.
Used Instrumentation
- ACQUITY UPLC H-Class Bio System with TUV Detector (λ=215 nm)
- ACQUITY QDa Detector (ESI+, 350–1250 m/z, probe temp. 500 °C)
- ACQUITY UPLC CSH C18 Column, 1.7 µm, 2.1×100 mm
- Empower 3 Software for data acquisition
Results and Discussion
Impurity assessment by intact analysis showed improved resolution of insulin and m-cresol, with up to 8-fold higher SNR for low-abundance impurities using MS detection versus UV. Comparability testing of three insulin sources revealed identical retention but distinct molecular weights (5808 Da vs. 5823 Da) and differing impurity profiles, highlighting MS specificity. Peptide mapping identified characteristic fragments (F1–F4); sequence variants in Sample 3 (N→K, KT→E) altered retention and confirmed by mass shifts, supporting molecular-level identity testing.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Enhanced sensitivity and specificity for impurity and identity assessment
- Cost-effective integration of MS into existing LC-UV workflows
- Streamlined QC in regulated environments
- Improved confidence in biosimilar comparability and drug batch consistency
Future Trends and Applications
Further integration of low-cost MS detectors in routine QC, automation of LC-MS workflows, expansion to other biotherapeutics and incorporation of advanced data analysis and real-time monitoring are expected to advance biopharma analytics.
Conclusion
The ACQUITY QDa Detector combined with UPLC provides a robust, efficient and regulatory-ready workflow for enhanced analysis of insulin analogues, improving detection of impurities, ensuring accurate identity tests and supporting biosimilar comparability in quality control.
References
- Hsu J, et al. Identification of recombinant insulin analogues by peptide mapping method. Journal of Food and Drug Analysis. 2012;20(4):957–962.
- Zion Market Research. Human insulin market report. 2016.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA approves Basaglar, the first follow-on insulin glargine product to treat diabetes. 2015.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Clinical pharmacology data to support a demonstration of biosimilarity to a reference product. Guidance. 2016.
- United States Pharmacopeia. Monograph: Insulin human [11061–68–0]. Revision Bulletin. 2015.
- Heald AH, et al. Most commercial insulin assays fail to detect recombinant insulin analogs. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry. 2006;43:306–308.
- Whitworth R. Mass Data Made Simple. The Analytical Scientist. Issue 1216;2015.
- Zhang J, et al. Development and validation of a peptide mapping method for the characterization of adalimumab with QDa Detector. Chromatographia. 2016;79:395–403.
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