Abstract

Natalizumab is a humanized IgG4 monoclonal antibody which binds human α4 integrin and is approved for treatment of multiple sclerosis and Crohn's disease. Assessment of the in vivo disposition of natalizumab presents a unique assay development challenge due to the ability of human IgG4 antibodies to undergo half-antibody exchange in vivo. Such exchange generates IgG4 molecules of mixed specificity comprising a natalizumab heavy–light chain pair coupled to an IgG4 heavy–light chain pair of unknown specificity. Since exchanged and non-exchanged species cannot be quantified independently using a single enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), a novel quantitation strategy was developed employing two ELISAs: one measuring total natalizumab including both intact and exchanged molecules, and the second measuring only intact natalizumab. The presence and amount of exchanged natalizumab in serum is calculated by the difference in values obtained in the two assays. To evaluate assay performance, a control reagent was created from natalizumab and an irrelevant humanized monoclonal IgG4 antibody. Subsequent validation demonstrated that both assays are specific, accurate, and precise within the working ranges of the assays (1.5–10 μg/mL for total and 0.5–12 μg/mL for intact natalizumab assays). The mean accuracy, intra- and inter-assay precision for both assays were 82–113%, ≤9% and ≤20%, respectively. Additionally, the limits of detection of intact and exchanged natalizumab were established using statistical methods. The utility of the two-assay strategy was confirmed by analyzing samples from a pharmacokinetic study in rats using different variants of natalizumab administered along with another human IgG4 antibody as an exchange partner.

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