Microchip capillary gel electrophoresis of multiply PEGylated high-molecular-mass glycoproteins

PEGylation is the most successful approach, to date, to prolong the in vivo survival of recombinant proteins. The conjugation of the polymer to glycoproteins results in challenging analysis, and furthermore, requires a wide variety of analytical tools for the determination of the extent of PEGylatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biotechnology journal 2012-05, Vol.7 (5), p.635-641
Hauptverfasser: Seyfried, Birgit K., Marchetti-Deschmann, Martina, Siekmann, Jürgen, Bossard, Mary J., Scheiflinger, Friedrich, Turecek, Peter L., Allmaier, Günter
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PEGylation is the most successful approach, to date, to prolong the in vivo survival of recombinant proteins. The conjugation of the polymer to glycoproteins results in challenging analysis, and furthermore, requires a wide variety of analytical tools for the determination of the extent of PEGylation. Herein, we present microchip capillary gel electrophoresis (MCGE) with a non‐commercial high‐molecular‐weight protein assay for the analysis of the PEGylation degree with a focus on multiple PEGylation. To show the potential of the modified MCGE system, high‐mass PEGylated glycoproteins (e.g. coagulation factor VIII) were analyzed. For the von Willebrand factor, the influence of glycans and the hydrodynamic radius on migration time and molecular weight determination is shown. The modified MCGE assay system is a powerful tool for the rapid assessment of the degree of PEGylation, demonstrating conjugate quality or reaction control of PEGylated proteins. This is the main advantage over time‐consuming conventional SDS‐PAGE. Furthermore, electrophoretic separation, staining, destaining, and fluorescence detection in one step combined with automated data analysis show that the MCGE system is a promising technique for high‐throughput monitoring. The MCGE system can be used for rapid structure confirmation (“MCGE fingerprinting”) of multiply PEGylated glycoproteins beyond the 230 kDa molecular mass range. See accompanying commentary by Yoshimoto and Yamamoto DOI: 10.1002/biot.201200143 PEG (polyethylene glycol)ylation is the most successful approach to date to prolong the in vivo survival of recombinant (glyco) proteins. The multiple conjugation of high molecular mass PEGs to the (glyco) proteins results in challenging analysis. In this article, the authors present a microcapillary gel electrophoresis assay for the determination of the PEGylation degree. The assay system presents a powerful high throughput tool for rapid (below 1 min) analysis (“MCGE fingerprinting”).
ISSN:1860-6768
1860-7314
DOI:10.1002/biot.201100407