4.5 Article

Chemical and enzymatic N-glycan release comparison for N-glycan profiling of monoclonal antibodies expressed in plants

Journal

ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 400, Issue 2, Pages 173-183

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2010.01.027

Keywords

Plantibodies; Chemical deglycosylation; Enzymatic N-glycan release; Exoglycosidases digestions; Negative-mode ESI-MS

Funding

  1. Plant Division and the Biomedical Research Direction of the Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (Havana, Cuba)
  2. CNRS
  3. University of Rouen, France
  4. Dublin-Oxford Glycobiology Laboratory, NIBRT, Conway Institute, Ireland
  5. Wellcome Trust

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Plants synthesize N-glycans containing the antigenic sugars alpha(1,3)-fucose and beta(1.2)-xylose. Therefore it is important to monitor these N-glycans in monoclonal antibodies produced in plants (plantibodies). We evaluated several techniques to characterize the N-glycosylation of a plantibody produced in tobacco plants with and without the KDEL tetrapeptide endoplasmic reticulum retention signal which should inhibit or drastically reduce the addition of alpha(1,3)-fucose and beta(1,2)-xylose. Ammonium hydroxide/carbonate-based chemical deglycosylation and PNGase A enzymatic release were investigated giving similar 2-aminobenzamide-labeled N-glycan HPLC profiles. The chemical release does not generate peptides which is convenient for MS analysis of unlabeled pool but its main drawback is that it induces degradation of alpha 1,3-fucosylated N-glycan reducing terminal sugar. Three analytical methods for N-glycan characterization were evaluated: (i) MALDI-MS of glycopeptides from tryptic digestion; (ii) negative-ion ESI-MS/MS of released N-glycans; (iii) normal-phase HPLC of fluorescently labeled glycans in combination with exoglycosidase sequencing. The MS methods identified the major glycans, but the HPLC method was best for identification and relative quantitation of N-glycans. Negative-mode ESI-MS/MS permitted also the correct identification of the linkage position of the fucose residue linked to the inner core N-acteylglucosamine (GIcNAc) in complex N-glycans. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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