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On page 1 showing 1 ~ 3 papers out of 3 papers

The effect of pH adjusted electrolytes on capillary isoelectric focusing assessed by high-resolution dynamic computer simulation.

  • Anna Takácsi-Nagy‎ et al.
  • Electrophoresis‎
  • 2022‎

The effect of the composition of electrolytes on capillary IEF is assessed for systems with carrier ampholytes covering two pH units and with catholytes of decreased pH, anolytes of increased pH, and both electrode solutions with adjusted pH values. For electrolytes composed of formic acid as anolyte and ammonium hydroxide as catholyte, simulation is demonstrated to provide the expected IEF system in which analytes with pI values within the formed pH gradient are focused and become immobile. Addition of formic acid to the catholyte results in the formation of an isotachophoretic zone structure that migrates toward the cathode. With ammonium hydroxide added to the anolyte migration occurs toward the anode. In the two cases, all carrier components and amphoteric analytes migrate isotachophoretically as cations or anions, respectively. The data reveal that millimolar amounts of a counter ion are sufficient to convert an IEF pattern into an ITP system. With increasing amounts of the added counter ion, the overall length of the migrating zone structure shrinks, the range of the pH gradient changes, and the migration rate increases. The studied examples indicate that systems of this type reported in the literature should be classified as ITP and not IEF. When both electrolytes are titrated, a non-uniform background electrolyte composed of formic acid and ammonium hydroxide is established in which analytes migrate according to local pH and conductivity without forming IEF or ITP zone structures. Simulation data are in qualitative agreement with previously published experimental data.


A novel microchip-based imaged CIEF-MS system for comprehensive characterization and identification of biopharmaceutical charge variants.

  • Scott Mack‎ et al.
  • Electrophoresis‎
  • 2019‎

A microfluidic system has been designed that integrates both imaged capillary isoelectric focusing (iCIEF) separations and downstream MS detection into a single assay. Along with the construction of novel instrumentation and an innovative microfluidic chip, conversion to MS-compatible separation reagents has also been established. Incorporation of 280 nm absorbance iCIEF-MS analysis not only permits photometric quantitation of separated charge isoforms but also facilitates the direct monitoring of analyte focusing and mobilization in real-time. The outcome of this effort is a device with the unique ability to allow for both the characterization and identification of protein charge and mass isoforms in under 15 min. Acquisition, quantitation, and identification of highly resolved intact mAb charge isoforms along with their critical N-linked glycan pairs clearly demonstrate analytical utility of our innovative system. In total, 33 separate molecular features were characterized by the iCIEF-MS system representing a dramatic increase in the ability to monitor multiple intact mAb critical quality attributes in a single comprehensive assay. Unlike previously reported CIEF-MS results, relatively high ampholyte concentrations, of up to 4% v/v, were employed without impacting MS sensitivity, observed to be on the order of 1% composition.


Rapid multi-attribute characterization of intact bispecific antibodies by a microfluidic chip-based integrated icIEF-MS technology.

  • Maggie A Ostrowski‎ et al.
  • Electrophoresis‎
  • 2023‎

Rapid, direct identification and quantitation of protein charge variants, and assessment of critical quality attributes with high sensitivity are important drivers required to accelerate the development of biotherapeutics. We describe the use of an enhanced microfluidic chip-based integrated imaged capillary isoelectric focusing-mass spectrometry (icIEF-MS) technology to assess multiple quality attributes of intact antibodies in a single run. Results demonstrate comprehensive detection of multiple charge variants of an aglycosylated knob-into-hole bispecific antibody. Upfront, on-chip separation by icIEF coupled to MS provides the orthogonal separation required to resolve and identify acidic posttranslational modifications including difficult-to-detect deamidation and glycation events at the intact protein level. In addition, on-chip UV detection enables pI determination and relative quantitation of charge isoforms. Six charge variant peaks were resolved by icIEF, mobilized toward the on-chip electrospray tip and directly identified by in-line icIEF-MS using a connected quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer. In addition to acidic charge variants, basic variants were identified as C-terminal lysine, N-terminal cyclization, proline amidation, and the combination of modifications (not typically identified by other intact methods), including lysine and one or two hexose additions. Nonspecific chain cleavages were also resolved, along with their acidic charge variants, demonstrating highly sensitive and comprehensive intact antibody multi-attribute characterization within a 15-min run time.


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