- Intact protein quantification in biological samples by liquid chromatography - high-resolution mass spectrometry: somatropin in rat plasma.
Intact protein quantification in biological samples by liquid chromatography - high-resolution mass spectrometry: somatropin in rat plasma.
The quantitative determination of intact proteins in biological samples by LC with high-resolution MS detection can be a useful alternative to ligand-binding assays or LC-MS-based quantification of a surrogate peptide after protein digestion. The 22-kDa biopharmaceutical protein somatropin (recombinant human growth hormone) was quantified down to 10 ng/mL (0.45 nM) in 75 μL of rat plasma by the combination of an immunocapture step using an anti-somatropin antibody and LC-MS on a quadrupole-time of flight instrument. Accuracy and precision of the method as well as its selectivity and sensitivity did not depend on the width of the mass extraction window nor on whether only one or a summation of multiple charge states of the protein analyte were used as the detection response. Quantification based on deconvoluted mass spectra showed equally acceptable method performance but with a less favorable lower limit of quantification of 30 ng/mL. Concentrations in plasma after dosing of somatropin to rats correlated well for the deconvolution approach and the quantification based on the summation of the response of the four most intense charge states (14+ to 17+) of somatropin.