| Literature DB >> 21444918 |
Gerhard Niederfellner1, Alfred Lammens, Olaf Mundigl, Guy J Georges, Wolfgang Schaefer, Manfred Schwaiger, Andreas Franke, Kornelius Wiechmann, Stefan Jenewein, Jerry W Slootstra, Peter Timmerman, Annika Brännström, Frida Lindstrom, Ekkehard Mössner, Pablo Umana, Karl-Peter Hopfner, Christian Klein.
Abstract
CD20 is a cell-surface marker of normal and malignant B cells. Rituximab, a monoclonal antibody targeting CD20, has improved the treatment of malignant lymphomas. Therapeutic CD20 antibodies are classified as either type I or II based on different mechanisms of killing malignant B cells. To reveal the molecular basis of this distinction, we fine-mapped the epitopes recognized by both types. We also determined the first X-ray structure of a type II antibody by crystallizing the obinutuzumab (GA101) Fab fragment alone and in complex with a CD20 cyclopeptide. Despite recognizing an overlapping epitope, GA101 binds CD20 in a completely different orientation than type I antibodies. Moreover, the elbow angle of GA101 is almost 30° wider than in type I antibodies, potentially resulting in different spatial arrangements of 2 CD20 molecules bound to a single GA101 or rituximab molecule. Using protein tomography, different CD20 complexes were found to be associated with the 2 antibodies, and confocal microscopy showed different membrane compartmentalization of these subpopulations of the cellular CD20 pool. Our findings offer a possible molecular explanation for the different cellular responses elicited by type I and II antibodies.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21444918 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2010-09-305847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113