Abstract
Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) represent a novel class of immunoconjugates with growing therapeutic relevance since they combine the efficacy of cytotoxic drugs with the specificity of antibodies. However, by design, ADCs introduce structural features to the mAb scaffold that complicate their analysis. Payload attachment to cysteine or lysine residues can often result in product heterogeneity regarding both the number of attached drug molecules and their conjugation site, necessitating the use of state-of-the-art MS instrumentation to elucidate their complexity. In middle-down mass spectrometry (MD MS), the gas-phase sequencing of ~25 kDa ADC subunits with dif-ferent ion activation techniques generally produces rich fragmentation mass spectra; however, spectral congestion can cause some fragment ions to go undetected, includ-ing those that can pinpoint the exact location of payload conjugation sites. Proton transfer charge reduction (PTCR) can substantially simplify fragment ion spectra, thereby unveiling the presence of product ions whose signals were previously sup-pressed. Herein, we present an MD MS strategy relying on the use of PTCR to investi-gate a cysteine-based ADC mimic with a variable drug-to-antibody ratio, targeting the unambiguous localization of payload conjugation sites. Unlike traditional tandem MS experiments (MS2), which could not provide a full map of conjugation sites, a single PTCR-based experiment (MS3) proved to be sufficient to achieve this goal across all variably modified ADC subunits, including isomeric ones. Combining the results ob-tained from orthogonal ion activation techniques followed by PTCR further strength-ened the confidence in assignments.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Extended Experimental Section, Supplementary Tables and Figures
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