Anja Resemann
Bruker
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anja Resemann.
mAbs | 2013
Daniel Ayoub; Wolfgang Jabs; Anja Resemann; Waltraud Evers; Catherine Evans; Laura Main; Carsten Baessmann; Elsa Wagner-Rousset; Detlev Suckau; Alain Beck
The European Medicines Agency received recently the first marketing authorization application for a biosimilar monoclonal antibody (mAb) and adopted the final guidelines on biosimilar mAbs and Fc-fusion proteins. The agency requires high similarity between biosimilar and reference products for approval. Specifically, the amino acid sequences must be identical. The glycosylation pattern of the antibody is also often considered to be a very important quality attribute due to its strong effect on quality, safety, immunogenicity, pharmacokinetics and potency. Here, we describe a case study of cetuximab, which has been marketed since 2004. Biosimilar versions of the product are now in the pipelines of numerous therapeutic antibody biosimilar developers. We applied a combination of intact, middle-down, middle-up and bottom-up electrospray ionization and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry techniques to characterize the amino acid sequence and major post-translational modifications of the marketed cetuximab product, with special emphasis on glycosylation. Our results revealed a sequence error in the reported sequence of the light chain in databases and in publications, thus highlighting the potency of mass spectrometry to establish correct antibody sequences. We were also able to achieve a comprehensive identification of cetuximab’s glycoforms and glycosylation profile assessment on both Fab and Fc domains. Taken together, the reported approaches and data form a solid framework for the comparability of antibodies and their biosimilar candidates that could be further applied to routine structural assessments of these and other antibody-based products.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2013
Nancy Leymarie; Paula J. Griffin; Karen R. Jonscher; Daniel Kolarich; Ron Orlando; Mark E. McComb; Joseph Zaia; Jennifer T Aguilan; William R. Alley; Friederich Altmann; Lauren E. Ball; Lipika Basumallick; Carthene R. Bazemore-Walker; Henning N. Behnken; Michael A. Blank; Kristy J. Brown; Svenja-Catharina Bunz; Christopher W. Cairo; John F. Cipollo; Rambod Daneshfar; Heather Desaire; Richard R. Drake; Eden P. Go; Radoslav Goldman; Clemens Gruber; Adnan Halim; Yetrib Hathout; Paul J. Hensbergen; D. Horn; Deanna C. Hurum
One of the principal goals of glycoprotein research is to correlate glycan structure and function. Such correlation is necessary in order for one to understand the mechanisms whereby glycoprotein structure elaborates the functions of myriad proteins. The accurate comparison of glycoforms and quantification of glycosites are essential steps in this direction. Mass spectrometry has emerged as a powerful analytical technique in the field of glycoprotein characterization. Its sensitivity, high dynamic range, and mass accuracy provide both quantitative and sequence/structural information. As part of the 2012 ABRF Glycoprotein Research Group study, we explored the use of mass spectrometry and ancillary methodologies to characterize the glycoforms of two sources of human prostate specific antigen (PSA). PSA is used as a tumor marker for prostate cancer, with increasing blood levels used to distinguish between normal and cancer states. The glycans on PSA are believed to be biantennary N-linked, and it has been observed that prostate cancer tissues and cell lines contain more antennae than their benign counterparts. Thus, the ability to quantify differences in glycosylation associated with cancer has the potential to positively impact the use of PSA as a biomarker. We studied standard peptide-based proteomics/glycomics methodologies, including LC-MS/MS for peptide/glycopeptide sequencing and label-free approaches for differential quantification. We performed an interlaboratory study to determine the ability of different laboratories to correctly characterize the differences between glycoforms from two different sources using mass spectrometry methods. We used clustering analysis and ancillary statistical data treatment on the data sets submitted by participating laboratories to obtain a consensus of the glycoforms and abundances. The results demonstrate the relative strengths and weaknesses of top-down glycoproteomics, bottom-up glycoproteomics, and glycomics methods.
Analytical Chemistry | 2010
Anja Resemann; Dirk Wunderlich; Ulrich Rothbauer; Bettina Warscheid; Heinrich Leonhardt; Jens Fuchser; Katja Kuhlmann; Detlev Suckau
The primary structure of a 13.6 kDa single heavy chain camelid antibody (V(H)H) was determined by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight/time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF/TOF) top-down sequence analysis. The majority of the sequence was obtained by mass spectrometric de novo sequencing, with the N-terminal 14 amino acid residues being determined using T(3)-sequencing and database interrogation. The determined sequence was confirmed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) analysis of a tryptic digest, which also provided high-energy collisionally induced dissociation (CID) data permitting the clear assignment of 3 of the 14 isobaric Leu/Ile residues. Five of the 11 Leu/Ile ambiguities could be resolved by homology comparisons with known V(H)H sequences. The monoisotopic molecular weight of the V(H)H was determined by ultrahigh-resolution orthogonal electrospray (ESI)-TOF analysis and found to be 13 610.6066 Da, in excellent agreement with the established sequence. To our knowledge, this is the first time that the entire primary structure of a protein with a molecular weight >13 kDa has been established by mass spectrometric top-down sequencing.
Expert Review of Proteomics | 2015
Jan Wiesner; Anja Resemann; Catherine Evans; Detlev Suckau; Wolfgang Jabs
Proteins are an important class of biologics. Their higher-order structures and therefore their functions are fundamentally determined by the correct formation of disulfide bonds (DSBs), making DSB analysis a central part of their development and production. Mass spectrometry-based bottom-up approaches are most widely used and are further classified according to different methods applied for DSB cleavage. Despite the importance of DSB analysis and the wide range of available methodologies, it is often a challenging and time consuming task. However, due to the current increase in biosimilar development in which animal and clinical trials can be reduced by extensive analytical comparability studies, increased efforts are being made to simplify DSB analysis. As an example of these developments, a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (TOF)/TOF workflow for the automated profiling and identification of DSBs is presented. Furthermore, mass spectrometry based methodologies, which do not identify DSBs directly but measure their influence on the higher-order structure, are also considered.
mAbs | 2016
Anja Resemann; Wolfgang Jabs; Anja Wiechmann; Elsa Wagner; Olivier Colas; Waltraud Evers; Eckhard Belau; L. Vorwerg; Catherine Evans; Alain Beck; Detlev Suckau
ABSTRACT The regulatory bodies request full sequence data assessment both for innovator and biosimilar monoclonal antibodies (mAbs). Full sequence coverage is typically used to verify the integrity of the analytical data obtained following the combination of multiple LC-MS/MS datasets from orthogonal protease digests (so called “bottom-up” approaches). Top-down or middle-down mass spectrometric approaches have the potential to minimize artifacts, reduce overall analysis time and provide orthogonality to this traditional approach. In this work we report a new combined approach involving middle-up LC-QTOF and middle-down LC-MALDI in-source decay (ISD) mass spectrometry. This was applied to cetuximab, panitumumab and natalizumab, selected as representative US Food and Drug Administration- and European Medicines Agency-approved mAbs. The goal was to unambiguously confirm their reference sequences and examine the general applicability of this approach. Furthermore, a new measure for assessing the integrity and validity of results from middle-down approaches is introduced – the “Sequence Validation Percentage.” Full sequence data assessment of the 3 antibodies was achieved enabling all 3 sequences to be fully validated by a combination of middle-up molecular weight determination and middle-down protein sequencing. Three errors in the reference amino acid sequence of natalizumab, causing a cumulative mass shift of only −2 Da in the natalizumab Fd domain, were corrected as a result of this work.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Uwe Möginger; Anja Resemann; Christopher E. Martin; Sharavathi Guddehalli Parameswarappa; Subramanian Govindan; Eike-Christian Wamhoff; Felix Broecker; Detlev Suckau; Claney L. Pereira; Anish Chakkumkal; Peter H. Seeberger; Daniel Kolarich
Production of glycoconjugate vaccines involves the chemical conjugation of glycans to an immunogenic carrier protein such as Cross-Reactive-Material-197 (CRM197). Instead of using glycans from natural sources recent vaccine development has been focusing on the use of synthetically defined minimal epitopes. While the glycan is structurally defined, the attachment sites on the protein are not. Fully characterized conjugates and batch-to-batch comparisons are the key to eventually create completely defined conjugates. A variety of glycoconjugates consisting of CRM197 and synthetic oligosaccharide epitopes was characterised using mass spectrometry techniques. The primary structure was assessed by combining intact protein MALDI-TOF-MS, LC-MALDI-TOF-MS middle-down and LC-ESI-MS bottom-up approaches. The middle-down approach on CNBr cleaved glycopeptides provided almost complete sequence coverage, facilitating rapid batch-to-batch comparisons, resolving glycan loading and identification of side products. Regions close to the N- and C-termini were most efficiently conjugated.
Analytical Chemistry | 2018
Pascal Heimer; Alesia A. Tietze; Charlotte A. Bäuml; Anja Resemann; Franz Josef Mayer; Detlev Suckau; Oliver Ohlenschläger; Daniel Tietze; Diana Imhof
Peptides and proteins carrying high numbers of cysteines can adopt various 3D structures depending on their disulfide connectivities. The unambiguous verification of such conformational isomers with more than two disulfide bonds is extremely challenging, and experimental strategies for their unequivocal structural analysis are largely lacking. We synthesized all 15 possible isomers of the 22mer conopeptide μ-PIIIA and applied 2D NMR spectroscopy and MS/MS for the elucidation of its structure. This study provides intriguing insights in how the disulfide connectivity alters the global fold of a toxin. We also show that analysis procedures involving comprehensive combinations of conventional methods are required for the unambiguous assignment of disulfides in cysteine-rich peptides and proteins and that standard compounds are crucially needed for the structural analysis of such complex molecules.
mAbs | 2018
Anja Resemann; Lily Liu-Shin; Guillaume Tremintin; Arun Malhotra; Adam Fung; Fang Wang; Gayathri Ratnaswamy; Detlev Suckau
ABSTRACT Human antibodies of the IgG2 subclass exhibit complex inter-chain disulfide bonding patterns that result in three structures, namely A, A/B, and B. In therapeutic applications, the distribution of disulfide isoforms is a critical product quality attribute because each configuration affects higher order structure, stability, isoelectric point, and antigen binding. The current standard for quantification of IgG2 disulfide isoform distribution is based on chromatographic or electrophoretic techniques that require additional characterization using mass spectrometry (MS)-based methods to confirm disulfide linkages. Detailed characterization of the IgG2 disulfide linkages often involve MS/MS approaches that include electrospray ionization or electron-transfer dissociation, and method optimization is often cumbersome due to the large size and heterogeneity of the disulfide-bonded peptides. As reported here, we developed a rapid LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF workflow that can both identify the IgG2 disulfide linkages and provide a semi-quantitative assessment of the distribution of the disulfide isoforms. We established signature disulfide-bonded IgG2 hinge peptides that correspond to the A, A/B, and B disulfide isoforms and can be applied to the fast classification of IgG2 isoforms in heterogeneous mixtures.
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2003
Detlev Suckau; Anja Resemann; Martin Schuerenberg; Peter Hufnagel; Jochen Franzen; Armin Holle
Analytical Chemistry | 2003
Detlev Suckau; Anja Resemann