Mona-Katharina Bill, Micaela Graglia, Jo-Anne Riley, Mateusz Zugaj, Nadeschda Demtschenko, Jonathan Fox, Lucas Bethge, Jeske J Smink, Christian Manz
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The separation and characterization of phosphorothioate (PS) diastereomers in GalNAc-conjugated siRNA presents a significant analytical challenge due to the high number of isomers present. To tackle this challenge, we explore and optimize various separation techniques, including chromatographic methods (ion-pair reversed-phase, anion exchange, and hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography) and ion mobility mass spectrometry (IMS) to assess their efficacy in diastereomer separation. Our results indicate that AEX provides the highest diastereomer selectivity among the chromatographic techniques, although none achieved complete diastereomer separation for the chosen antisense and sense strand reference compounds. IMS, applied within a fragment-based tandem mass spectrometry approach, allows separation of all diastereomers of the antisense strand and partial resolution of the sense strand in the gas phase. The comparison of relative LC-UV quantification with IMS data reveals a strong correlation and suggests that IMS can effectively characterize diastereomer ratios not only qualitatively but also quantitatively, establishing IMS as a promising complementary analytical technique for diastereomer separation besides more established LC-UV methods.
期刊介绍:
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry’s mission is the rapid publication of excellent and high-impact research articles on fundamental and applied topics of analytical and bioanalytical measurement science. Its scope is broad, and ranges from novel measurement platforms and their characterization to multidisciplinary approaches that effectively address important scientific problems. The Editors encourage submissions presenting innovative analytical research in concept, instrumentation, methods, and/or applications, including: mass spectrometry, spectroscopy, and electroanalysis; advanced separations; analytical strategies in “-omics” and imaging, bioanalysis, and sampling; miniaturized devices, medical diagnostics, sensors; analytical characterization of nano- and biomaterials; chemometrics and advanced data analysis.