Abstract

The potential of CE with native fluorescence detection (Flu) for the profiling of the therapeutic protein erythropoietin (EPO) was studied. EPO is a highly heterogeneous glycoprotein comprising a large number of isoforms. CE was applied to induce separation among the various glycoforms. Native Flu of EPO provided high detection selectivity yielding good signal-to-noise ratios and stable baselines, particularly when compared to conventional UV absorbance detection. In order to enhance EPO isoform resolution, CE was performed using a capillary with a neutral coating in combination with a simple BGE of 2.0 M acetic acid (pH 2.1). CE-Flu analysis of the EPO biological reference preparation of the European Pharmacopeia resulted in a highly detailed glycoform profile. Migration time RSDs for selected EPO isoforms were less than 0.22% and 0.80% for intraday and interday repeatability, respectively. RSDs for relative peak intensity of the major EPO isoforms were less than 3%. The achieved resolution, migration time stability, and sensitivity allowed discrimination of different EPO products (EPO-α and EPO-β) based on the recorded glycoform pattern. The developed CE-Flu method is relatively straightforward, and shows potential for quality control in biopharmaceutical production.

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