Rapid and efficient de-glycosylation of glycoproteins
11530403 · 2022-12-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Anushikha Thakur (Electronic City phase-1, IN)
- Seija Rohil (Viveknagar post, IN)
- Shrivardhan Patil (Kolhapur, IN)
- Meenakshi Sudhakaran (Kochi, IN)
- Laxmi Adhikary (Bangalore, IN)
Cpc classification
C07K2317/41
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N9/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K16/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C12N9/80
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
The present invention discloses rapid and cost-effective method of de-glycosyation of a glycoprotein, wherein, glycoprotein is combined with anionic surfactant and reducing agent and non-ionic surfactant in order to obtain stable denatured glycoprotein. An endoglycosidase is further added to denatured glycoprotein to cleave N-linked glycans in order to obtain de-glycosylated protein. A rapid tool for assessing the protein conformation by partial de-glycosylation is also presented wherein the partial de-glycosylated protein is analysed using capillary electrophoresis (CE-SDS).
Claims
1. A method of complete N-glycan de-glycosylation of a glycoprotein, wherein, the method comprising steps of: (a) providing a glycoprotein; (b) combining the glycoprotein with an anionic surfactant and reducing agent, wherein the reducing agent is in a sufficient amount to denature the glycoprotein and the anionic surfactant is in a concentration of 0.1% to 0.8%; (c) incubating components of step (b) at a temperature from 90° C. to 100° C. for 2 minutes to 5 minutes to provide for a denatured glycoprotein; (d) cooling the denatured glycoprotein; (e) combining the denatured glycoprotein with a non-ionic surfactant in an amount to counter the inhibitory effects of the anionic surfactant, where the non-ionic surfactant is in a concentration of 0.6% to 1.2%; (f) introducing an endoglyrosidase to cleave N-linked glycans in an amount from 0.66 unit to 10 units per 1 mg of denatured glycoprotein; (g) incubating components of step (f) at 37° C. for 1 to 15 minutes at atmospheric pressure to provide for a completely de-glycosylated protein; and (h) separating the completely N-glycan de-glycosylated protein from released glycans.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the anionic surfactant is selected from the group consisting of SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate), carboxylates, sulphonates, petroleum sulphonates, alkylbenzenesulphonates, naphthalenesulphonates, olefin sulphonates, alkyl sulphates, sulphates, sulphated natural oils and fats, sulphated esters, sulphated alkanolamides and alkylphenols.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein said anionic surfactant is sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS).
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the non-ionic surfactant is selected from the group consisting of 2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol, ethoxylated aliphatic alcohols, polyoxyethylene surfactants, carboxylic esters, polyethylene glycol esters, anhydrosorbitol ester and its ethoxylated derivatives, glycol esters of fatty acids, carboxylic amides; monoalkanolamine condensates and polyoxyethylene fatty acid amides.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the non-ionic surfactant is 2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the reducing agent is in an amount to break disulphide bonds and selected from the group consisting of 3-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, or tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the reducing agent is β-mercaptoethanol.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein β-mercaptoethanol is in an amount of 100 mM to 150 mM.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the endoglycosidase is PNGaseF which has the ability to cleave N-linked glycans from glycoproteins when the innermost residue is GlcNAc.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the released glycans are separated by liquid chromatography.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the glycoprotein is an antibody, fragment thereof or fusion protein with multiple glycan sites.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the method further comprises the steps of: optionally adding an exoglycosidase in an amount of 0.1 units per 1 mg of denatured glycoprotein after step (e) or after step (g), and incubating the components at 37° C. for 30 minutes to provide a de-sialylated protein.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the exoglycosidase is sialidase which has the ability to cleave terminal sialic acid from both N- and O-linked glycans of glycoproteins.
14. A method of partial de-glycosylation of a glycoprotein for comparing tertiary structure, wherein, the method comprising steps of: (a) providing a glycoprotein; (b) combining the glycoprotein with endoglycosidase to partially cleave N-linked glycans in an amount from 1 unit to 10 units per 1 mg of glycoprotein; (c) incubating components of step (b) at 37° C. for 45 minutes to 8 hours to provide for a partially de-glycosylated protein.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein the endoglycosidase is PNGaseF which has the ability to cleave N-linked glycans from glycoproteins when the innermost residue is GlcNAc.
16. The method of claim 14, wherein the partially de-glycosylated glycoprotein is analysed using capillary electrophoresis.
17. The method of claim 14, wherein the glycoprotein is an antibody, fragment thereof or fusion protein with multiple glycan sites.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Definitions
(16) The term “de-glycosylation” particularly refers to the process of removal of sugar entity (glycans) from a glycoprotein.
(17) The term “partial de-glycosylation” particularly refers to intentional incomplete de-glycosylation resulting in mixture of glycosylated, de-glycosylated, glycoprotein and intermediates.
(18) The term “complete de-glycosylation” particularly refers to complete removal of glycans from a glycoprotein wherein the entire volume is of de-glycosylated glycoproteins.
(19) The term “glycoprotein” refers to an antibody, fragment thereof or fusion protein with multiple glycan sites.
(20) The “commercially available kits” refer to SigmaP7367 kit, Prozyme GKE-5006 kit, Roche 11365177001 kit, NEB PNGaseF kit and Waters Rapigest kit.
(21) Present invention describes a method with a rapid tool to assess and compare tertiary/quaternary conformation of glycoproteins with multiple glycan sites. This method utilizes the difference in exposure of glycan sites resulting in differential rates of de-glycosylation by PNGaseF. The sub-population of species created after partial de-glycosylation of multiple glycan sites at a particular time point is unique to a protein and is guided by factors such as surface accessibility of glycans, steric hindrance by bulky and highly branched glycans. This fingerprint is used to compare overall conformation of glycoproteins. Reduced CE-SDS was used to exploit the mass difference created because of partial de-glycosylation to segregate the populations.
(22) The method of partial de-glycosylation of a glycoprotein for comparing tertiary structure method comprises steps of: (a) providing a glycoprotein; (b) combining the glycoprotein with endoglycosidase to partially cleave N-linked glycans in an amount from 1 unit to 10 units per 1 mg of glycoprotein; (c) incubating components of step (b) at a temperature from about 37° C. for about 45 mins to 8 hrs to provide for a partially de-glycosylated protein.
(23) Present invention further describes a rapid and efficient protein de-glycosylation method using detergents and reducing agents for the release of complex glycan structures to be further processed for LC profiling. The method was applied to large and complex glycoproteins wherein the attached oligosaccharides are often buried and are difficult to release. The novelty of the present method lies in unique combination of the components in right proportion that facilitates the enzymatic activity with minimum amount of enzyme used and in a very short time.
(24) The method of de-glycosyation of a glycoprotein comprises the steps of: (a) providing a glycoprotein; (b) combining the glycoprotein with an anionic surfactant and reducing agent, wherein the reducing agent is in a sufficient amount to denature the glycoprotein; (c) incubating components of step (b) at a temperature from 90° C. to 100° C. for 2 minutes to 5 minutes to provide for a denatured glycoprotein; (d) cooling the denatured glycoprotein; (e) combining the denatured glycoprotein with a non-ionic surfactant in an amount to counter the inhibitory effects of the anion surfactant (f) introducing an endoglycosidase to cleave N-linked glycans in an amount from 0.66 unit to 10 units per 1 mg of denatured glycoprotein; (g) incubating components of step (f) at 37° C. for 1 to 15 minutes to provide for a de-glycosylated protein; and (h) separating the de-glycosylated protein from released glycans.
(25) Methods and Materials
(26) The glycoproteins including IgG1 mAbs and fusion proteins were produced in CHO cells and purified using standard antibody purification procedures at Biocon Ltd.
(27) In one embodiment, glycoproteins are biosimilar of monoclonal antibodies and biosimilar of fusion proteins.
(28) In another embodiment, the glycoproteins are monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) such as Itolizumab, Trastuzumab, bevacizumab, adalimumab etc.
(29) In another embodiment, the glycoproteins are fusion proteins such as Etanercept etc.
(30) The details of the glycoproteins are as mentioned below.
(31) Glycoprotein A: Etanercept
(32) Glycoprotein B: Itolizumab
(33) Glycoprotein C: Trastuzumab
(34) Glycoprotein D: Fusion mAb (Cetuximab+TGFRBII)
(35) Glycoprotein E: Bevacizumab
(36) Glycoprotein F: Adalimumab
(37) One part of the present invention is to provide a partial de-glycosylation method as a rapid tool to assess and compare tertiary/quaternary conformation of glycoprotein with multiple glycan sites. The method comprises addition of an endoglycosidase to native glycoprotein in 1 unit to 10 unit per 1 mg of glycoprotein for limited period such as for 45 mins to 8 hours to partially cleave N-linked glycans in order to obtain sub-populations of partially de-glycosylated protein. The partially de-glycosylated glycoprotein is analysed using capillary electrophoresis.
(38) Second part of the present invention is to provide a method of complete de-glycosylation of a glycoprotein, wherein, glycoprotein is combined with anionic surfactant and reducing agent and incubated at 90-100° C. for 2 mins to 5 mins. Further non-ionic surfactant is added in order to obtain stable denatured glycoprotein. The denatured glycoprotein is further combined with non-ionic surfactant to counter the inhibitory effects of the anionic surfactant. An endoglycosidase is added 1-10 unit per 1 mg of denatured glycoprotein and incubated for 1-15 mins of time at 37° C. to cleave N-linked glycans in order to obtain de-glycosylated protein. An exoglycosidase 0.1 unit per 1 mg added to denatured glycoprotein after non-ionic surfactant or de-glycosylated protein after endoglycosidase and incubated for 30 mins at 37° C. to cleave terminal sialic acid of N- and O-glycans to obtain a de-sialylated protein of denatured glycoprotein. The released glycan are separated by liquid chromatography.
(39) An exoglycosidase is optionally added to denatured glycoprotein after non-ionic surfactant or de-glycosylated protein after endoglycosidase to cleave terminal sialic acid of N- and O-glycans to obtain a de-sialylated protein of denatured glycoprotein.
(40) In one embodiment, the anionic surfactant is a member selected from the group consisting of SDS (Sodium dodecyl sulfate), carboxylates, sulphonates, petroleum sulphonates, alkylbenzenesulphonates, naphthalenesulphonates, olefin sulphonates, alkyl sulphates, sulphates, sulphated, natural oils & fats, sulphated esters, sulphated alkanolamides and alkylphenols.
(41) In preferred embodiment, the anionic surfactant used for denaturation of glycoprotein is SDS.
(42) The reducing agent is in an amount to break disulphide bonds and is selected from the group consisting of β-mercaptoethanol, dithiothreitol, or tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine
(43) In preferred embodiment, the reducing agent is β-mercaptoethanol in an amount of 100 mM to 150 mM.
(44) The non-ionic surfactant is a member selected from the group consisting of TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol, ethoxylated aliphatic alcohols, polyoxyethylene surfactants, carboxylic esters, polyethylene glycol esters, anhydrosorbitol ester & it's ethoxylated derivatives, glycol esters of fatty acids, carboxylic amides, monoalkanolamine condensates and polyoxyethylene fatty acid amides
(45) In one embodiment, the non-ionic surfactant such as TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol is added to counter effect inhibitory effects of SDS.
(46) In preferred embodiment, TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol is added at a concentration of 0.60% to 1.2%.
(47) In another embodiment, commercially available SF surfactant such as Waters Rapigest kit for denaturation of protein followed by de-glycosylation using Roche PNGase F was also used to compare performance of present invention.
(48) In one part, the endoglycosidase such as PNGaseF was added to denatured glycoprotein to cleave N-linked glycans from glycoproteins where the innermost GlcNAc residue may or may not be linked to α1-6 fucose residue to obtain complete de-glycosylated glycoprotein. The time required is between 1 to 15 minutes.
(49) In another part, endoglycosidase is PNGaseF, which was added to native glycoprotein for 45 mins to 8 hrs to partially cleave N-linked glycans from glycoproteins where the innermost glycan residue is GlcNAc to obtain partial de-glycosylated glycoprotein.
(50) The exoglycosidase such as Sialidase was added to denatured and N-Glycan de-glycosylated glycoprotein to cleave terminal sialic acid from O-linked glycans from glycoproteins
(51) In preferred embodiment, the Sialidase enzymatic reaction carried out at 37° C. for 30 mins to obtain de-sialylated protein.
(52) De-glycosylation under native conditions was performed as follows.
(53) The PNGaseF (Roche, cat. 11365193001) was used to remove the N-glycan by incubating 1 mg of each glycoprotein in 50 mM Tris Cl pH 8.0, 1 mM CaCl2 with 10 units of PNGaseF at 37° C. for 16 hours for complete de-glycosylation. For partial de-glycosylation incubation was for shorter time as indicated on respective figures.
(54) For Sialidase digestion (QABio, E-S001), 0.1 Units of Sialidase was added to 1 mg of each glycoprotein in 50 mM Sodium acetate pH 4.5 and incubated for 30 mins at 37° C. The samples were frozen at −20 C till the analysis was performed.
(55) De-glycosylation under denaturing conditions was performed as follows.
(56) 1 mg of each glycoprotein in 50 mM Tris Cl pH 8.0, 1 mM CaCl2 was mixed with 100-130 mM O-mercaptoethanol and 0.1-0.8% of SDS from 10% stock solution. The mix was incubated at 95° C. for 2 minutes and the cooled down to room temperature (2 minutes). 0.75-1% TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol was added and vortexed followed by 1-10 units of PNGaseF enzyme (Roche, cat. 11365193001) and incubated at 37° C. for 1-15 minutes.
(57) For Sialidase digestion, 0.1 Units of Sialidase was added to 1 mg of each glycoprotein in 50 mM Sodium acetate pH 4.5 and incubated for 30 mins at 37° C. The glycoprotein for Sialidase digestion was pre-treated with 10 units of PNGase F in the presence of 0.4% SDS, 100 mM β-mercaptoethanol and 0.75% TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol as mentioned above. The samples were frozen at −20° C. till the analysis was performed.
(58) Sample preparation for NP HPLC-FLD of glycans was performed as follows
(59) The released glycans were separated from the protein by adding chilled ethanol followed by centrifugation for 15 min at 8000 rpm. The supernatant containing the glycans was collected and vacuum dried. Labelling reagent was prepared by dissolving 5 mg of Anthranillic acid and 6 mg of Sodium cyano borohydride in 100 μL of a 70:30 DMSO: Glacial acetic acid mixture. Five μL of this reagent was added to the dried glycan sample and incubated at 80° C. for 45 min. The labelled glycans were then reconstituted in water and washed with ethyl acetate 5 times. The excess ethyl acetate is removed each time using phase separation of organic and aqueous layers and the samples are again vacuum dried. The dried samples are reconstituted in 100 μl of 50% acetonitrile and 50% water (v/v) and mixed thoroughly. The supernatant is removed and transferred to a maximum recovery vial and injected in to HPLC system with a fluorescent detector. The glycans were separated on LudgerSep N2 Amide Column with mobile phase A as 100% Acetonitrile and B as 50 mM Ammonium Formate pH 4.4. The fluorescent detector was set at excitation 352 nm and emission 435 nm. The glycan samples can be stored at 2-8° C. till the analysis.
(60) CE-SDS sample preparation and instrument operating procedure as follows
(61) The CE-SDS analysis was performed on PA 800 Plus Pharmaceutical Analysis System (Beckman Coulter) with 32 karat V 9.1 software. Capillary of 30 cm length was used with 50μ ID and aperture of 200μ. Samples were prepared by desalting 125 μg of glycoprotein using SDS buffer pH 9.5 in a 10 kDa MWCO NanoSep. 76 μl SDS buffer of pH 9.5 was mixed with 19 μl of desalted sample along with 0.5 μl internal standard (10 kDa mol. wt. marker, SDSMW analysis kit) and 5 μl β-mercaptoethanol. The mixture is vortexed and briefly centrifuged. The contents were incubated at 80° C. for 2 minutes and cooled down the solution to room temperature. The contents were transferred to PCR tube placed in a universal vial.
(62) The de-glycosylation methods were carried out as per method of present invention (
Example 1
(63) A time course for de-glycosylation of a multiple glycan site glycoprotein A by PNGaseF under native conditions is illustrated in
(64) In
(65) The interference from buffer matrix on PNGase F digestion was also evaluated and the assay was insensitive to protein buffer (
(66) The analytical method variability was established at 45 minutes de-glycosylation of glycoprotein A under native conditions and evaluated based on intra-day reproducibility/repeatability, inter-day and inter-analyst runs. In Table 1, the relative abundance of each sub-population shown in
(67) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Analytical method variability evaluated for intra-day, inter-day and inter-analyst. Each sub-population is estimated as relative area percentage of peak 1, 2, 3 and 4. Parameters Sub-Populations evaluated Peak 4 Peak 3 Peak 2 Peak 1 Day 1 24.0 46.6 19.9 9.6 27.1 45.6 18.9 8.5 25.9 47.5 18.0 8.6 Intra-day 6.0 2.1 5.0 6.7 % RSD Day 2 23.4 49.7 18.4 8.5 23.7 49.3 19.1 8.0 21.0 48.3 20.6 10.1 Inter-day 8.7 3.3 5.0 9.0 % RSD Day 2 22.9 49.0 19.0 9.1 23.6 49.5 19.1 7.9 20.9 47.9 20.7 10.6 Inter-analyst % RSD 5.6 1.5 4.7 12.3
(68) We estimated the effect of partial denaturation/unfolding of antibody by multiple factors on the sub-populations of partially de-glycosylated antibody to evaluate the robustness of the method. The denatured samples were obtained by exposure to heat, detergents and reducing agents prior to PNGaseF digestion. Both heat and detergent affected the hydrogen bonding and hydrophobic interactions. Reducing agents target the di-sulphide linkages in proteins. Reduced CE-SDS profile of partially de-glycosylated glycoprotein A by 10 U PNGase F at 37° C. with mixing at 300 rpm for 45 minutes after partial denaturation. Completely de-glycosylated glycoprotein A was obtained by 16 hrs PNGase F digestion. As seen in
(69) In order to use the method for comparing higher order structures it was tested on multiple lots of glycoprotein A approved from EU and US regulatory agencies. Reduced CE-SDS profile in
(70) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 LC glycan profile comparison of of lots of glycoprotein A showing maximum difference in reduced CE-SDS profile. The numbers correspond to relative abundance of glycan species in the lots. Glyco- protein A 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Lot #4 0.2 0.3 0.9 16.1 3.4 1.1 13.1 1.5 5 5 14 24.7 10.7 1.3 0.4 2.4 Lot #1 0.2 0.4 0.9 16.3 2.7 1.4 13.2 1.4 5.6 6.5 14 24.4 9.6 0.9 0.3 2.2
(71) The glycans released after protein de-glycosylation is useful both for quality control and for determining whether a protein will have a desired therapeutic efficacy or other effect. For a chromatographic mapping protocol, and for other analytical scenarios, complete de-glycosylation of both proteins and peptides is often desirable. For example, de-glycosylation may reduce smearing during protein separation by SDS-PAGE or may allow easier ionization and spectral interpretation during mass spectrometric analysis. This may be particularly useful when looking at intact molecular weights of proteins that may be skewed due to heterogeneity from an abundance of PTM's. In the case of therapeutic antibodies, de-glycosylation is often necessary in characterizing modifications such as the presence of C-terminal lysine, or for labelled or drug-conjugated monoclonal antibodies, to monitor the number of small molecules coupled to the immunoglobulin. For this reasons, it is often advantageous to de-glycosylate glycoproteins.
(72) In present invention, we show a rapid and efficient protein-de-glycosylation method using detergents and reducing agents. The flowchart of the steps followed for protein de-glycosylation is depicted in
(73) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Description of the method. The step number correspond with the flowchart. Step No. Description Procedure Significance 1 Glyco- 1 mg of protein is Endo-glycosidase protein taken in 2 mg/ml activity is concentration optimum in Tris in micro-centrifuge buffer pH 8. tube. Dilution in Tris buffer pH 8. 2 Sodium SDS is added to the SDS is a denaturant dodecyl final concentration that unfolds sulphate of 0.4% and the the protein and tube is inverted 3 expose the glycans times quickly to for efficient avoid precipitation enzymatic activity. of proteins. 3 β-mercapto- β-Me is added β-Me reduces ethanol to the final disulphide linkages concentration of and help in 100 mM and vortexed. protein unfolding. 4 Incubation Incubate the High temperature reaction mixture helps in at 95° C. for unfolding. 2-5 minutes. 5 Cool down Cool down to Required for room temperature enzyme addition. for 2 minutes 6 Triton-X Add triton X-100 Trion X-100 is a non- 100 to the final ionic detergent and concentration counteracts SDS for of 0.75% of its inhibitory effect and vortexed. on enzyme activity. 7 PNGaseF Add 1 U of Roche PNGaseF is an PNGaseF and enzyme that incubate at 37° C. cleaves N-glycan for 1-15 minutes. from proteins. 8 De- The released glycans glycosylated are processed further protein and for N-glycan profiling. released The de-glycosylated glycans protein can be further processed for MS analysis.
Example 2
(74) Briefly, anionic detergent SDS (0.4%) and reducing agent β-mercaptoethanol (100 mM) were used for unfolding the protein at 95° C. The protein was then treated with non-ionic detergent TRITON X-100™2-[4-(2,4,4-trimethylpentan-2-yl)phenoxy]ethanol (0.75%) prior to de-glycosylation by PNGaseF to counter the inhibitory effects of SDS. One mM calcium chloride was used in reaction buffer (10 mM Tris-Cl pH 8.0) to stabilize and promote PNGaseF activity. The reaction optimization conditions are detailed in
(75) The novelty of the present method lies in unique combination of the components in right proportion that facilitates the enzymatic activity with minimum amount of enzyme used to complete the process in a very short time that is between 1 to 15 minutes. As shown in Table 4, in commercially available kits 10-25 units of enzyme have been shown to release N-glycans from 1 mg of denatured protein (see specific activity). In present method, with in-house developed protocol as per Table 3, 1 unit of enzyme (Roche enzyme tested) was able to digest ˜95% of 1 mg of denatured protein in 1 minute which was almost tenfold increase in enzymatic activity and significant reduction in time compared to 1 hr to overnight incubation in commercially available kits (Table 4).
(76) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 De-glycosylation kits available in market. All the ingredients used in the de-glycosylation mix are easily available and commonly used for protein denaturation. Product Reaction IUB Specific (PNGaseF) condition Unit definition unit activity Sigma SDS: 0.2% One unit will 1 Sigma 10 U/mg P7367 βMe: 100 mM catalyze the unit = 1 ≥25 U/mg Triton-X: 1.2% release of N-linked IUB Reaction time: oligosaccharides miliunit 1-3 hrs from 1 nanomole of denatured Ribonuclease B in 1 minute at 37° C. at pH 7.5 Prozyme SDS: 0.1% One unit of N- 1 25 U/mg GKE-5006 βMe: 50 mM Glycanase is Prozyme NP-40: 0.75% defined as the unit = 1 Reaction time: 2 amount of enzyme IUB unit hours-overnight required to catalyze the release of N-linked oligosaccharides from 1 μmole of denatured Ribonuclease B per minute at pH 7.5 and 37° C. Roche kit Reaction time: One unit will 1 Roche 10 U/mg 11365177001 Overnight without catalyze the release unit = 1 the detergents. of N-linked IUB Denaturation by oligosaccharides miliunit SDS increases the from 1 nanomole glycosylation rate of denatured considerably dabsyl fibrin (1-2 hours) glycopeptide SDS: up to 0.2% in 1 minute at βMe: 1% 37° C. at pH 7.8 Triton-X/NP-40: 0.5-2% NEB SDS: up to 0.5% One unit is 65 NEB 1800000 PNGaseF DTT: 40 mM defined as units = 1 U/mg NP-40: 1% the amount of IUB Reaction time: enzyme required milliunit 1 hr. to remove >95% of the carbohydrate from 10 μg of denatured RNase B in 1 hour at 37° C. in a total reaction volume of 10 μl 10.8 ug/milli-unit
Example 3
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Example 4
(78)
(79) The glycoproteins tested in present invention are monoclonal antibodies/fusion antibodies (>100 kDa) which are structurally complex and heavily glycosylated at their Fc, Fab and fusion parts.
(80) Furthermore, as shown in
Example 5
(81) We extended similar recipe of detergents and reducing agents for de-glycosylation by enzymes other than PNGaseF. In
(82) The method can be analysed further by adding other endoglycosidase enzymes such as Beta-galactosidase, N-acetylglucosaminidase, endo-H, endo-F2, endo-S, mannosidase and fucosidase to remove respective terminal sugar residues.
Example 6
(83) We also compared the performance of commercially available Waters Rapigest kit for denaturation and then subsequent de-glycosylation by Roche PNGase F.
(84) The rapid de-glycosylation method has following merits and application.
(85) 1) De-glycosylation of structurally complex glycoproteins, which are heavily glycosylated.
(86) 2) Complete N-Glycan LC-MS profiling including exo-glycosidase array of intact glycoproteins including N and O-glycans.
(87) 3) Intact and reduced mass analysis of glycoproteins which suffers due to inherent inhomogeneity and low ionization of exposed glycans. The detergents can be removed prior to MS analysis using desalting spin columns. Multiple post digestion clean-up protocols are also available in literature which removes detergents from the reaction mixture.
(88) 4) Identification of glycosylation sites and site occupancy using MS which is difficult otherwise because of glycan heterogeneity at the site of attachment.