Mapping IgG Subunit Glycoforms Using HILIC and a Wide-Pore Amide Stationary Phase
Applications | 2015 | WatersInstrumentation
Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) dominate the biopharmaceutical market and their N-glycosylation critically influences effector functions, pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy. Domain-specific profiling of IgG subunit glycoforms enhances understanding of structure–function relationships and supports quality control and biosimilarity assessments.
This application note presents a workflow to map IgG subunit glycoforms via hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) on a wide-pore amide stationary phase, coupled with mass spectrometry (MS). Key aims include:
Monoclonal antibodies were digested with IdeS (and carboxypeptidase B for cetuximab), denatured with guanidine HCl, and reduced with TCEP to yield three ~25 kDa subunits (two LC, two Fd′, two Fc/2). HILIC separations employed:
Wide-pore amide HILIC on the Glycoprotein BEH Amide, 300 Å, 1.7 µm column offers a complementary, MS-compatible approach to RP for IgG subunit glycoform mapping. It delivers high resolution, domain specificity, and robust performance, supporting therapeutic antibody characterization and quality assessment workflows.
Consumables, LC/TOF, LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC columns
IndustriesProteomics
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) dominate the biopharmaceutical market and their N-glycosylation critically influences effector functions, pharmacokinetics, safety, and efficacy. Domain-specific profiling of IgG subunit glycoforms enhances understanding of structure–function relationships and supports quality control and biosimilarity assessments.
Study Objectives and Overview
This application note presents a workflow to map IgG subunit glycoforms via hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) on a wide-pore amide stationary phase, coupled with mass spectrometry (MS). Key aims include:
- Achieving high-resolution HILIC separations of Fc/2, Fd′, and light chain (LC) subunits.
- Demonstrating orthogonal selectivity to conventional reversed-phase (RP) methods.
- Profiling glycoform heterogeneity in trastuzumab and cetuximab samples.
- Evaluating column performance, reproducibility, and lifetime.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Monoclonal antibodies were digested with IdeS (and carboxypeptidase B for cetuximab), denatured with guanidine HCl, and reduced with TCEP to yield three ~25 kDa subunits (two LC, two Fd′, two Fc/2). HILIC separations employed:
- ACQUITY UPLC Glycoprotein BEH Amide, 300 Å, 1.7 µm, 2.1 × 150 mm column.
- Mobile phases: 0.1% TFA in water (A) and 0.1% TFA in acetonitrile (B); gradient reversed from RP conditions.
- Flow rate 0.2 mL/min; column temperature 45–60 °C; sample temperature 5–10 °C.
Main Results and Discussion
- HILIC separated ~10 peaks: early eluting LC and Fd′ subunits, followed by multiple Fc/2 glycoforms (A2, FA2, FA2G1, FA2G2, etc.). MS deconvolution provided accurate mass assignments for each glycoform.
- Batch-to-batch comparison of trastuzumab highlighted reproducible differences in Fc/2 galactosylation (FA2, FA2G1, FA2G2), consistent with released glycan assays.
- Column durability testing (300 consecutive injections) showed stable retention times, resolution (Rs≈2 for A2 vs FA2), low carryover (<0.2%), and consistent backpressure (~6000 psi).
- Benchmarking against a 130 Å Glycan BEH Amide column and two competitor amide phases demonstrated 48–261% improvement in peak-to-valley metrics for Fc/2 glycoform separation on the 300 Å phase.
- Cetuximab profiling revealed both Fc and Fd′ subunit glycosylation, including non-human immunogenic glycoforms (α-1,3-galactose, Neu5Gc) in Fd′, complementing RapiFluor-MS released glycan data.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Provides MS-compatible, orthogonal selectivity to RP for hydrophilic protein modifications.
- Enables rapid, domain-specific glycoform profiling for quality control and biosimilar comparison.
- Delivers high resolution, reproducibility, and column robustness for routine laboratory use.
- Minimal sample preparation accelerates workflow and supports targeted MS strategies.
Future Trends and Applications
- Integration of HILIC subunit profiling with targeted MS (SRM/PRM) for low-abundance glycoforms.
- Extension to diverse antibody formats, Fc-fusion proteins, and other biotherapeutics.
- Automation and high-throughput platforms with advanced bioinformatics for glycoform data analysis.
- Development of new stationary phase chemistries to separate complex glycan isomers and larger biomolecules.
Conclusion
Wide-pore amide HILIC on the Glycoprotein BEH Amide, 300 Å, 1.7 µm column offers a complementary, MS-compatible approach to RP for IgG subunit glycoform mapping. It delivers high resolution, domain specificity, and robust performance, supporting therapeutic antibody characterization and quality assessment workflows.
References
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- Gucinski AC. Rapid Characterization and Comparison of Stressed anti-CD20 Drugs using Middle Down Mass Spectrometry. 61st ASMS Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Allied Topics; 2013.
- Ayoub D et al. Correct primary structure assessment and extensive glyco-profiling of cetuximab by combined intact, middle-up, middle-down and bottom-up ESI and MALDI MS. Methods Mol Biol. 2013;988:93–113.
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- Lauber MA et al. Rapid Preparation of Released N-Glycans for HILIC Analysis Using a Novel Fluorescence and MS-Active Labeling Reagent. Waters Application Note 720005275EN; 2015.
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