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Dive into the research topics where Qingcheng Guo is active.

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Featured researches published by Qingcheng Guo.


mAbs | 2012

Characterization and comparison of commercially available TNF receptor 2-Fc fusion protein products

Qingqiao Tan; Qingcheng Guo; Chen Fang; Chong Wang; Bohua Li; Hao Wang; Jing Li; Yajun Guo

Because of rapidly increasing market demand and rising cost pressure, the innovator of etanercept (Enbrel®) will inevitably face competition from biosimilar versions of the product. In this study, to elucidate the differences between the reference etanercept and its biosimilars, we characterized and compared the quality attributes of two commercially available, biosimilar TNF receptor 2-Fc fusion protein products. Biosimilar 1 showed high similarity to Enbrel® in critical quality attributes including peptide mapping, intact mass, charge variant, purity, glycosylation and bioactivity. In contrast, the intact mass and MS/MS analysis of biosimilar 2 revealed a mass difference indicative of a two amino acid residue variance in the heavy chain (Fc) sequences. Comprehensive glycosylation profiling confirmed that biosimilar 2 has significantly low sialylated N-oligosaccharides. Biosimilar 2 also displayed significant differences in charge attributes compared with the reference product. Interestingly, biosimilar 2 exhibited similar affinity and bioactivity levels compared with the reference product despite the obvious difference in primary structure and partial physiochemical properties. For a biosimilar development program, comparative analytical data can influence decisions about the type and amount of animal and clinical data needed to demonstrate biosimilarity. Because of the limited clinical experience with biosimilars at the time of their approval, a thorough knowledge surrounding biosimilars and a case-by-case approach are needed to ensure the appropriate use of these products.


mAbs | 2014

Versatile characterization of glycosylation modification in CTLA4-Ig fusion proteins by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

Lei Zhu; Qingcheng Guo; Huaizu Guo; Tao Liu; Yingxin Zheng; Peiming Gu; Xi Chen; Hao Wang; Sheng Hou; Yajun Guo

CTLA4-Ig is a highly glycosylated therapeutic fusion protein that contains multiple N- and O-glycosylation sites. Glycosylation plays a vital role in protein solubility, stability, serum half-life, activity, and immunogenicity. For a CTLA4-Ig biosimilar development program, comparative analytical data, especially the glycosylation data, can influence decisions about the type and amount of animal and clinical data needed to establish biosimilarity. Because of the limited clinical experience with biosimilars before approval, a comprehensive level of knowledge about the biosimilar candidates is needed to achieve subsequent development. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC–MS) is a versatile technique for characterizing N- and O-glycosylation modification of recombinant therapeutic proteins, including 3 levels: intact protein analysis, peptide mapping analysis, and released glycans analysis. In this report, an in-depth characterization of glycosylation of a candidate biosimilar was carried out using a systematic approach: N- and O-linked glycans were identified and electron-transfer dissociation was then used to pinpoint the 4 occupied O-glycosylation sites for the first time. As the results show, the approach provides a set of routine tools that combine accurate intact mass measurement, peptide mapping, and released glycan profiling. This approach can be used to comprehensively research a candidate biosimilar Fc-fusion protein and provides a basis for future studies addressing the similarity of CTLA4-Ig biosimilars.


mAbs | 2015

Generation and characterization of a target-selectively activated antibody against epidermal growth factor receptor with enhanced anti-tumor potency

Yun Yang; Qingcheng Guo; Mao Xia; Yantao Li; Xiaoyun Peng; Tao Liu; Xin Tong; Jin Xu; Huaizu Guo; Weizhu Qian; Sheng Hou; Jianxin Dai; Hao Wang; Rong Liu; Yajun Guo

Panitumumab, as a commercially available antibody, is an effective anticancer therapeutic against epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), although it exerts weak antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) activity owing to its IgG2 nature. Here, we firstly engineered panitumumab by grafting its variable region into an IgG1 backbone. The engineered panitumumab (denoted as Pan) retained binding activity identical to the parental antibody while exhibiting stronger ADCC activity in vitro and more potent antitumor effect in vivo. To further enhance the target selectivity of Pan, we generated Pan-P by tethering an epitope-blocking peptide to Pan via a tumor-specific protease selective linker. Pan-P showed almost 40-fold weaker affinity compared with Pan, but functional activity was restored to a similar extent as Pan when Pan-P was selectively activated by urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). More importantly, targeted localization of Pan-P was observed in tumor samples from colorectal cancer (CRC) patients and tumor-bearing nude mice, strongly indicating that specific activation also existed ex vivo and in vivo. Furthermore, Pan-P also exhibited effective in vivo antitumor potency similar to Pan. Taken together, our data evidence the enhanced antitumor potency and excellent target selectivity of Pan-P, suggesting its potential use for minimizing on-target toxicity in anti-EGFR therapy.


mAbs | 2016

Acid-induced aggregation propensity of nivolumab is dependent on the Fc

Boning Liu; Huaizu Guo; Jin Xu; Ting Qin; Lu Xu; Junjie Zhang; Qingcheng Guo; Dapeng Zhang; Weizhu Qian; Bohua Li; Jianxin Dai; Sheng Hou; Yajun Guo; Hao Wang

ABSTRACT Nivolumab, an anti-programmed death (PD)1 IgG4 antibody, has shown notable success as a cancer treatment. Here, we report that nivolumab was susceptible to aggregation during manufacturing, particularly in routine purification steps. Our experimental results showed that exposure to low pH caused aggregation of nivolumab, and the Fc was primarily responsible for an acid-induced unfolding phenomenon. To compare the intrinsic propensity of acid-induced aggregation for other IgGs subclasses, tocilizumab (IgG1), panitumumab (IgG2) and atezolizumab (aglyco-IgG1) were also investigated. The accurate pH threshold of acid-induced aggregation for individual IgG Fc subclasses was identified and ranked as: IgG1 < aglyco-IgG1 < IgG2 < IgG4. This result was cross-validated by thermostability and conformation analysis. We also assessed the effect of several protein stabilizers on nivolumab, and found mannitol ameliorated the acid-induced aggregation of the molecule. Our results provide valuable insight into downstream manufacturing process development, especially for immune checkpoint modulating molecules with a human IgG4 backbone.


mAbs | 2016

Characterization of alanine to valine sequence variants in the Fc region of nivolumab biosimilar produced in Chinese hamster ovary cells

Yantao Li; Tuo Fu; Tao Liu; Huaizu Guo; Qingcheng Guo; Jin Xu; Dapeng Zhang; Weizhu Qian; Jianxin Dai; Bohua Li; Yajun Guo; Sheng Hou; Hao Wang

ABSTRACT Nivolumab is a therapeutic fully human IgG4 antibody to programmed death 1 (PD-1). In this study, a nivolumab biosimilar, which was produced in our laboratory, was analyzed and characterized. Sequence variants that contain undesired amino acid sequences may cause concern during biosimilar bioprocess development. We found that low levels of sequence variants were detected in the heavy chain of the nivolumab biosimilar by ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) and tandem mass spectrometry. It was further identified with UPLC-MS/MS by IdeS or trypsin digestion. The sequence variant was confirmed through addition of synthetic mutant peptide. Subsequently, the mixing base signal of normal and mutant sequence was detected through DNA sequencing. The relative levels of mutant A424V in the Fc region of the heavy chain have been detected and demonstrated to be 12.25% and 13.54%, via base peak intensity (BPI) and UV chromatography of the tryptic peptide mapping, respectively. A424V variant was also quantified by real-time PCR (RT-PCR) at the DNA and RNA level, which was 19.2% and 16.8%, respectively. The relative content of the mutant was consistent at the DNA, RNA and protein level, indicating that the A424V mutation may have little influence at transcriptional or translational levels. These results demonstrate that orthogonal state-of-the-art techniques such as LC- UV- MS and RT-PCR should be implemented to characterize recombinant proteins and cell lines for development of biosimilars. Our study suggests that it is important to establish an integrated and effective analytical method to monitor and characterize sequence variants during antibody drug development, especially for antibody biosimilar products.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2016

In-Depth Characterization of a Pro-Antibody–Drug Conjugate by LC–MS

Boning Liu; Huaizu Guo; Junjie Zhang; Jingya Xue; Yun Yang; Ting Qin; Jin Xu; Qingcheng Guo; Dapeng Zhang; Weizhu Qian; Bohua Li; Sheng Hou; Jianxin Dai; Yajun Guo; Hao Wang

Pro-antibody-drug conjugate (PDC) is a hybrid structural format of immunoconjugate, where the structural complexity of pro-antibody and intrinsic heterogeneity of ADCs impose a prominent analytical challenge to the in-depth characterization of PDCs. In the present study, we successfully prepared and characterized PanP-DM1 as a model of PDCs, which is an anti-EGFR pro-antibody following conjugation with DM1 at lysine residues. The drug-to-antibody ratio (DAR) of PanP-DM1 was determined by LC-MS after deglycosylation, and verified by UV/vis spectroscopy. Following reduction or IdeS digestion, the pro-antibody fragments linked with DM1 were investigated by middle-down mass spectrometry. Furthermore, more than 20 modified lysine conjugation sites were determined by peptide mapping after trypsin digestion. Additionally, more than ten glycoforms of PanP-DM1 were also identified and quantified. In summary, critical quality attributes (CQAs) of PDCs including DAR, drug load distribution, and conjugation sites were fully characterized, which would contribute to the development of other PDCs for cancer treatment.


Biomedical Chromatography | 2016

Quantitative analysis of histone H3 and H4 post-translational modifications in doxorubicin-resistant leukemia cells

Tao Liu; Qingcheng Guo; Huaizu Guo; Sheng Hou; Jing Li; Hao Wang

The epigenetic remodeling of chromatin through histone modifications has been widely implicated in drug resistance of cancer cells. However, whether epigenetic mechanisms contribute specifically to doxorubicin resistance in leukemia has not been carefully examined. Using a stable and sensitive workflow based on LC-MS, we quantitatively compared the extents of methylation and acetylation of histone H3 and H4 in acute leukemia cell line HL60 and its doxorubicin-resistant derivative, HL60/ADR, as well as the chronic leukemia cell line K562 and its doxorubicin-resistant derivative, K562/ADR. We found that increased levels of H3K9 methylation, H3K14, H3K18 and H3K23 acetylation, and potentially H4K20 methylation, are associated with drug resistance in both cells. Our results demonstrated that the doxorubicin-resistant acute and chronic leukemia cell lines may share a common epigenetic mechanism that involves a combination of transcriptional activation and silencing.


Chromatographia | 2015

Development and Validation of LC–MS/MS Method for the Quantitation of Infliximab in Human Serum

Xiaoyun Peng; Boning Liu; Yantao Li; Hui Wang; Xi Chen; Huaizu Guo; Qingcheng Guo; Jin Xu; Hao Wang; Dapeng Zhang; Jianxin Dai; Sheng Hou; Yajun Guo


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2016

Therapeutic efficacy of an anti-PD-L1 antibody based immunocytokine in a metastatic mouse model of colorectal cancer

Xi Chen; Jin Xu; Qingcheng Guo; Lingfei Wang; Yun Yang; Huaizu Guo; Nana Gu; Dapeng Zhang; Weizhu Qian; Sheng Hou; Jing Li; Jianxin Dai; Yajun Guo; Hao Wang


mAbs | 2018

Elimination of tumor by CD47/PD-L1 dual-targeting fusion protein that engages innate and adaptive immune responses

Boning Liu; Huaizu Guo; Jin Xu; Ting Qin; Qingcheng Guo; Nana Gu; Dapeng Zhang; Weizhu Qian; Jianxin Dai; Sheng Hou; Hao Wang; Yajun Guo

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Hao Wang

Second Military Medical University

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Huaizu Guo

Second Military Medical University

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Sheng Hou

Second Military Medical University

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Yajun Guo

Second Military Medical University

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Jianxin Dai

Second Military Medical University

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Jin Xu

Second Military Medical University

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Weizhu Qian

Second Military Medical University

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Dapeng Zhang

Second Military Medical University

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Bohua Li

Second Military Medical University

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Boning Liu

South China University of Technology

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