Intact Transition Epitope Mapping - Thermodynamic Weak-force Order (ITEM - TWO)
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Journal of Proteomics
Abstract
We have developed an electrospray mass spectrometry method which is capable to determine antibody affinity
in a gas phase experiment. A solution with the immune complex is electrosprayed and multiply charged ions are
translated into the gas phase. Then, the intact immune-complex ions are separated from unbound peptide ions.
Increasing the voltage difference in a collision cell results in collision induced dissociation of the immunecomplex
by which bound peptide ions are released. When analyzing a peptide mixture, measuring the mass of
the complex-released peptide ions identifies which of the peptides contains the epitope. A step-wise increase in
the collision cell voltage difference changes the intensity ratios of the surviving immune complex ions, the
released peptide ions, and the antibody ions. From all the ions´ normalized intensity ratios are deduced the
thermodynamic quasi equilibrium dissociation constants (KDm0g
# ) from which are calculated the apparent gas
phase Gibbs energies of activation over temperature ( Gm g
T
0
# ). The order of the apparent gas phase dissociation
constants of four antibody – epitope peptide pairs matched well with those obtained from in-solution measurements.
The determined gas phase values for antibody affinities are independent from the source of the
investigated peptides and from the applied instrument. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier
PXD016024.
Significance: ITEM - TWO enables rapid epitope mapping and determination of apparent dissociation energies of
immune complexes with minimal in-solution handling. Mixing of antibody and antigen peptide solutions initiates
immune complex formation in solution. Epitope binding strengths are determined in the gas phase after
electrospraying the antibody / antigen peptide mixtures and mass spectrometric analysis of immune complexes
under different collision induced dissociation conditions. Since the order of binding strengths in the gas phase is
the same as that in solution, ITEM – TWO characterizes two most important antibody properties, specificity and
affinity.
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Research Article