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Correlations between changes in conformational dynamics and physical stability in a mutant IgG1 mAb engineered for extended serum half-life
Authors:Ranajoy Majumdar  Reza Esfandiary  Steven M Bishop  Hardeep S Samra  C Russell Middaugh  David B Volkin  David D Weis
Institution:1.Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS USA;2.Macromolecule and Vaccine Stabilization Center; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS USA;3.Department of Formulation Sciences; MedImmune; Gaithersburg, MD USA;4.Department of Chemistry and R. N. Adams Institute for Bioanalytical Chemistry; University of Kansas; Lawrence, KS USA
Abstract:This study compares the local conformational dynamics and physical stability of an IgG1 mAb (mAb-A) with its corresponding YTE (M255Y/S257T/T259E) mutant (mAb-E), which was engineered for extended half-life in vivo. Structural dynamics was measured using hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange mass spectrometry while protein stability was measured with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and size exclusion chromatography (SEC). The YTE mutation induced differences in H/D exchange kinetics at both pH 6.0 and 7.4. Segments covering the YTE mutation sites and the FcRn binding epitopes showed either subtle or no observable differences in local flexibility. Surprisingly, several adjacent segments in the CH2 and distant segments in the VH, CH1, and VL domains had significantly increased flexibility in the YTE mutant. Most notable among the observed differences is increased flexibility of the 244–254 segment of the CH2 domain, where increased flexibility has been shown previously to correlate with decreased conformational stability and increased aggregation propensity in other IgG1 mAbs (e.g., presence of destabilizing additives as well as upon de-glycosylation or methionine oxidation). DSC analysis showed decreases in both thermal onset (Tonset) and unfolding (Tm1) temperatures of 7°C and 6.7°C, respectively, for the CH2 domain of the YTE mutant. In addition, mAb-E aggregated faster than mAb-A under accelerated stability conditions as measured by SEC analysis. Hence, the relatively lower physical stability of the YTE mutant correlates with increased local flexibility of the 244–254 segment, providing a site-directed mutant example that this segment of the CH2 domain is an aggregation hot spot in IgG1 mAbs.
Keywords:hydrogen/deuterium exchange  mass spectrometry  differential scanning calorimetry  YTE mutation  immunoglobulin G1  monoclonal antibody  flexibility  stability  aggregation
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