| Literature DB >> 27573935 |
Martyna Prądzińska1, Izabela Behrendt1, Juan Astorga-Wells2,3, Aleksandr Manoilov2, Roman A Zubarev4, Aleksandra S Kołodziejczyk1, Sylwia Rodziewicz-Motowidło1, Paulina Czaplewska5.
Abstract
Human cystatin C (hCC) is a small cysteine protease inhibitor whose oligomerization by propagated domain swapping is linked to certain neurological disorders. One of the ways to prevent hCC dimerization and fibrillogenesis is to enable its interaction with a proper antibody. Herein, the sites of interaction of hCC with dimer-preventing mouse monoclonal anti-hCC antibodies Cyst28 are studied and compared with the binding sites found for mAb Cyst10 that has almost no effect on hCC dimerization. In addition, hCC epitopes in complexes with native polyclonal antibodies extracted from human serum were studied. The results obtained with hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX MS) were compared with the previous findings made using the excision/extraction MS approach. The main results from the two complementary MS-based approaches are found to be in agreement with each other, with some differences being attributed to the specificity of each method. The findings of the current studies may be important for future design of hCC dimerization inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: Epitope identification; HDX exchange; Human cystatin C; Mass spectrometry
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Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27573935 PMCID: PMC5107209 DOI: 10.1007/s00726-016-2316-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amino Acids ISSN: 0939-4451 Impact factor: 3.520
Fig. 1Monomeric structure of human cystatin C (PDB: 3GAX). L1, loop 1; L2, loop 2; β1–5, beta strands; AS, appendix structure. Structures involved in 3D domain swapping process are matched in red
Comparison of the epitopes identified by epitope extraction/excision and HDX-MS
| Antibody | Epitope identified by epitope excision/extraction | Epitope identified by HDX-MS |
|---|---|---|
| Cyst10 | 53–61 | |
| 60–70 | ||
| 96–102 | ||
|
|
| |
| Cyst28 | 41–48 | |
|
|
| |
| 65–73 | ||
|
|
| |
| 101–111 | ||
| NAbs | 41–48 | |
| 53–62 | ||
| 65–73 | ||
| 92–99 | ||
| 101–111 |
Fig. 2Peptides detected by LC–MS after pepsin digestion of human cystatin C. Red lines indicate peptides for which deuteration level analysis was performed (Figs. 4, 5, 6). Green lines indicate other detected peptides
Fig. 4Deuteration level of the analyzed fragments of hCC in the presence (black color) and in the absence (blue color) of Cyst10 antibody
Fig. 5Deuteration level of the analyzed fragments of hCC in the presence (black color) and in the absence (blue color) of the Cyst28 antibody
Fig. 6Deuteration level of the analyzed fragments of hCC in the presence (black color) and the absence (blue color) of NAbs
Fig. 3Scheme of the on-exchange analysis approach for the epitope mapping of the hCC–Cyst10/28/NAbs complexes by HDX-MS: a control experiment; b sample analysis
Fig. 7Graphic representation of epitope locations for the studied antibodies