Abstract

Epitope mapping, which is the identification of antigenic determinants, is essential for the design of novel antibody-based therapeutics and diagnostic tools. ITEM-THREE is a mass spectrometry-based epitope mapping method that can identify epitopes on antigens upon generating an immune complex in electrospray-compatible solutions by adding an antibody of interest to a mixture of peptides from which at least one holds the antibody's epitope. This mixture is nano-electrosprayed without purification. Identification of the epitope peptide is performed within a mass spectrometer that provides an ion mobility cell sandwiched in-between two collision cells and where this ion manipulation setup is flanked by a quadrupole mass analyzer on one side and a time-of-flight mass analyzer on the other side. In a stepwise fashion, immune-complex ions are separated from unbound peptide ions and dissociated to release epitope peptide ions. Immune complex-released peptide ions are separated from antibody ions and fragmented by collision induced dissociation. Epitope-containing peptide fragment ions are recorded, and mass lists are submitted to unsupervised data base search thereby retrieving both, the amino acid sequence of the epitope peptide and the originating antigen. ITEM-THREE was developed with antiTRIM21 and antiRA33 antibodies for which the epitopes were known, subjecting them to mixtures of synthetic peptides of which one contained the respective epitope. ITEM-THREE was then successfully tested with an enzymatic digest of His-tagged recombinant human β-actin and an antiHis-tag antibody, as well as with an enzymatic digest of recombinant human TNFα and an antiTNFα antibody whose epitope was previously unknown.

Highlights

  • Epitope mapping, which is the identification of antigenic determinants, is essential for the design of novel antibody-based therapeutics and diagnostic tools

  • Identification of the epitope peptide is performed within a mass spectrometer that provides an ion mobility cell sandwiched in-between two collision cells and where this ion manipulation setup is flanked by a quadrupole mass analyzer on one side and a time-of-flight mass analyzer on the other side

  • Based on our gas phase epitope mapping strategy, termed ITEM-ONE [6], where epitopes of known antigens have been identified by precisely determining the mass of the extracted epitope peptide, we have advanced to ITEM-THREE, where mass spectrometric amino acid sequencing of unknown epitope peptides is performed to identify an antigenic determinant on an antigen surface

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Summary

Introduction

Epitope mapping, which is the identification of antigenic determinants, is essential for the design of novel antibody-based therapeutics and diagnostic tools. ITEMTHREE is a mass spectrometry-based epitope mapping method that can identify epitopes on antigens upon generating an immune complex in electrospray-compatible solutions by adding an antibody of interest to a mixture of peptides from which at least one holds the antibody؅s epitope. The availability of mass spectrometers equipped with ion-mobility separation chambers provide an additional dimension for the separation of ions based on their m/z values and on their shapes and sizes [42,43,44] This new generation of mass spectrometers led to the development of fast and easy to apply epitope mapping methods by which epitope peptides of an antibody of interest can be identified in a relatively simple and robust fashion [6, 20]. Based on our gas phase epitope mapping strategy, termed ITEM-ONE [6], where epitopes of known antigens have been identified by precisely determining the mass of the extracted epitope peptide, we have advanced to ITEM-THREE, where mass spectrometric amino acid sequencing of unknown epitope peptides is performed to identify an antigenic determinant on an antigen surface

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