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Analysis of oligomeric stability of insulin analogs using hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry

Authors :
Noritaka Hashii
Shiori Nakazawa
Akira Harazono
Nana Kawasaki
Source :
Analytical Biochemistry. 420:61-67
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

Insulin analog products for subcutaneous injection are prepared as solutions in which insulin analog molecules exist in several oligomeric states. Oligomeric stability can affect their onset and duration of action and has been exploited in designing them. To investigate the oligomeric stability of insulin analog products having different pharmacokinetics, we performed hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX/MS), which is a rapid method to analyze dynamic aspects of protein structures. Two rapid-acting analogs (lispro and glulisine) incorporated deuteriums more and faster than recombinant human insulin, whereas a long-acting analog (glargine) and two intermediate-acting preparations (protamine-containing formulations) incorporated them less and more slowly. Kinetic analysis revealed that the number of slowly exchanged hydrogens (D(s)) (k0.01 min(-1)) accounted for the difference in HDX reactivity among analogs. Furthermore, we found correlations between HDX kinetics and pharmacokinetics reported previously. Their maximum serum concentration (C(max)) was linearly correlated with D(s) (r=0.88) and the number of maximum exchangeable hydrogens (D(∞)) (r=0.89). The maximum drug concentration time (t(max)) was also correlated with reciprocals of D(s) and D(∞) (r=0.86 and r=0.96, respectively). Here we demonstrate the ability of HDX/MS to evaluate oligomeric stability of insulin analog products.

Details

ISSN :
00032697
Volume :
420
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Analytical Biochemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....263e24de6007009ab376577e4edce770