Mass Spectrometry Detection and Imaging of a Non-Covalent Protein-Drug Complex in Tissue from Orally Dosed Rats.
Eva Illes-TothOliver J HaleJames W HughesNicole StrittmatterJonathan RoseBen ClaytonRebecca SargeantStewart JonesAndreas DannhornRichard J A GoodwinHelen J CooperPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2022)
Here, we demonstrate detection by mass spectrometry of an intact protein-drug complex directly from liver tissue from rats that had been orally dosed with the drug. The protein-drug complex comprised fatty acid binding protein 1, FABP1, non-covalently bound to the small molecule therapeutic bezafibrate. Moreover, we demonstrate spatial mapping of the [FABP1+bezafibrate] complex across a thin section of liver by targeted mass spectrometry imaging. This work is the first demonstration of in situ mass spectrometry analysis of a non-covalent protein-drug complex formed in vivo and has implications for early stage drug discovery by providing a route to target-drug characterization directly from the physiological environment.