4.8 Article

Detection and Identification of the Vibrational Markers for the Quantification of Methionine Oxidation in Therapeutic Proteins

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 90, Issue 11, Pages 6959-6966

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.8b01238

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Methionine oxidation is a major degradation pathway in therapeutic proteins which can impact the structure and function of proteins as well as risk to drug product quality. Detecting Met oxidation in proteins by peptide mapping followed by liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is the industry standard but is also labor intensive and susceptible to artifacts. In this work, vibrational difference spectroscopy in combination with 180 isotopic shift enabled us to demonstrate the application of Raman and FTIR techniques for the detection and quantification of Met oxidation in various therapeutic proteins, including mAbs, fusion proteins, and antibody drug conjugate. Vibrational markers of Met oxidation products, such as sulfoxide and sulfone, corresponding to S=0 and C=S=0 stretching frequencies were unequivocally identified based 180 isotoptic shifts. The intensity of the isolated vC-S Raman band at 702 cm(-1) was successfully applied to quantify the average Met oxidation level in multiple proteins. These results are further corroborated by oxidation levels measured by tryptic peptide mapping, and thus the confirmed Met oxidation levels derived from Raman and mass spectrometry are indeed consistent with each other. Thus, we demonstrate the broader application of vibrational spectroscopy to detect the subtle spectral changes associated with various chemical or physical degradation of proteins, including Met oxidation as well as higher order structural changes.

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