Abstract

Immunoglobulins A (IgA) include some of the most abundant human antibodies and play an important role in defending mucosal surfaces against pathogens. The unique structural features of the heavy chain of IgA subclasses (called IgA1 and IgA2) enable them to polymerize via the joining J-chain, resulting in IgA dimers but also higher oligomers. While secretory sIgA oligomers are dominant in milk and saliva, IgAs exist primarily as monomers in serum. No method currently allows disentangling the millions of unique IgAs potentially present in the human antibody repertoire. Obtaining unambiguous sequence reads of their hypervariable antigen-binding regions is a prerequisite for IgA identification. We here report a mass spectrometric method that uses electron capture dissociation (ECD) to produce straightforward-to-read sequence ladders of the variable parts of both the light and heavy chains of IgA1s, in particular, of the functionally critical CDR3 regions. We directly compare the native top-down ECD spectra of a heavily and heterogeneously N- and O-glycosylated anti-CD20 IgA1, the corresponding N-glycosylated anti-CD20 IgG1, and their Fab parts. We show that while featuring very different MS1 spectra, the native top-down ECD MS2 spectra of all four species are nearly identical, with cleavages occurring specifically within the CDR3 and FR4 regions of both the heavy and light chain. From the sequence-informative ECD data of an intact glycosylated IgA1, we foresee that native top-down ECD will become a valuable complementary tool for the de novo sequencing of IgA1s from milk, saliva, or serum.

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