| Literature DB >> 20875152 |
Di Wu1, Jing Sun, Tianlei Xu, Shuning Wang, Guoqing Li, Yixue Li, Zhiwei Cao.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The enrichment and importance of some aromatic residues, such as Tyr and Trp, have been widely noticed at the binding interfaces of antibodies from many experimental and statistical results, some of which were even identified as "hot spots" contributing significantly greater to the binding affinity than other amino acids. However, how these aromatic residues influence the immune binding still deserves further investigation. A large-scale examination was done regarding the local spatial environment around the interfacial Tyr or Trp residues. Energetic contribution of these Tyr and Trp residues to the binding affinity was then studied regarding 82 representative antibody interfaces covering 509 immune complexes from the PDB database and IMGT/3Dstructure-DB.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20875152 PMCID: PMC2946779 DOI: 10.1186/1745-7580-6-S1-S1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunome Res ISSN: 1745-7580
Figure 1Flatten view of a binding interface at an antibody (PDB code 1c08). VLTyr50, VLTrp94, VLTyr96, VHTyr33, VHTyr50, VHTyr53, VHTyr58, VHTrp98 (IMGT numbering: V-Kappa Tyr56, V-Kappa Trp114, V-Kappa Tyr116, VH Tyr38, VH Tyr55, VH Tyr58, VH Tyr66, VH Trp107) cluster together to form a spatial “Aromatic Island” (abbreviated to “AI”) at the HyHEL-10 antibody interfaces, which is highlighted with white line (Tyr, colored in dark yellow; Trp, colored in orange). Figure 1 is generated by software JMiV.
Statistical Probability for Aromatic Island among simulative interfaces
| Size of AIa | Number of Antibody Interfaces | Averaged Probabilityb | Number of Interfaces with statistically significant AI | Averaged Percentagec |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 7 | 51.01% | 0 | 40.0% |
| 3 | 6 | 23.93% | 0 | 51.4% |
| 4 | 15 | 3.45% | 12 | 75.0% |
| 5 | 9 | 1.68% | 9 | 81.8% |
| 6 | 11 | 0.21% | 11 | 94.3% |
| 7 | 9 | 0.08% | 9 | 94.0% |
| >= 8 | 8 | 0 | 8 | 94.6% |
| Total | 65 | / | 49 | / |
a The size of AI is indicated in terms of the number of aromatic Tyr and Trp residues in AI
b The averaged probability for observing the AI among simulative interfaces (% for 10,000 times)
c The averaged percentage for interfacial aromatic residues being clustered into AI
Figure 2Correlation between the size of Aromatic Island and the loss of SASA for Aromatic Island The loss of SASA for AI (Å2) is calculated as the difference between the sum of SASA for every side chain of aromatic residue in fully independent state and the actual SASA for Aromatic Island. The size of Aromatic Island is recorded as the number of aromatic Tyr and Trp residues included in AI
Figure 3Stacking Conformation for aromatic residues in Aromatic Island The antigen protein is displayed with solvent surface mode. For better view, only the aromatic interfacial Tyr and Trp residues in AI are displayed with stick mode from the antibody. (A) Aromatic Island size of 4 at the binding interface of antibody 9D7 and IL-10 (PDB code 1lk3) (B) Aromatic Island size of 5 at the binding interface of antibody 33H1 and potassium channel molecule (PDB code 1ors) (C) Aromatic Island size of 6 at the binding interface of antibody and cytochrome AA3 (PDB code 1ar1) (D) Aromatic Island size of 7 at the binding interface of antibody YTS 105.18 and T-cell surface glycoprotein CD8 alpha chain (PDB code 2arj) (E) Aromatic Island size of 8 at the binding interface of antibody HyHEL-26 and HEL (PDB code 1ndm) (F) Aromatic Island size of 9 at the binding interface of antibody HyHEL-10 mutant and HEL (PDB code 2eiz)
Figure 4Correlation between the energetic gap and SASA loss of Aromatic Islands at 30 antibody interfaces. Along the x-axis all of the values in a bin (size 200 Å2) are pulled together as a group and shown in the middle. The gap of binding free energy between theoretical and experimental data is indicated with grey square for every immune complex. In each group, the gap is averaged and indicated with black dot.