| Literature DB >> 27982100 |
Vanessa Siegmund1,2, Birgit Piater2, Bijan Zakeri3, Thomas Eichhorn2, Frank Fischer2, Carl Deutsch2, Stefan Becker2, Lars Toleikis2, Björn Hock2, Ulrich A K Betz2, Harald Kolmar1.
Abstract
Spontaneous isopeptide bond formation, a stabilizing posttranslational modification that can be found in gram-positive bacterial cell surface proteins, has previously been used to develop a peptide-peptide ligation technology that enables the polymerization of tagged-proteins catalyzed by SpyLigase. Here we adapted this technology to establish a novel modular antibody labeling approach which is based on isopeptide bond formation between two recognition peptides, SpyTag and KTag. Our labeling strategy allows the attachment of a reporting cargo of interest to an antibody scaffold by fusing it chemically to KTag, available via semi-automated solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS), while equipping the antibody with SpyTag. This strategy was successfully used to engineer site-specific antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) that exhibit cytotoxicities in the subnanomolar range. Our approach may lead to a new class of antibody conjugates based on peptide-tags that have minimal effects on protein structure and function, thus expanding the toolbox of site-specific antibody conjugation.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27982100 PMCID: PMC5159917 DOI: 10.1038/srep39291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Site-specific conjugation of Spy-tagged IgG1-Fc with 5/6-carboxytetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA)-KTag by SpyLigase-mediated isopeptide bond formation.
(A) Cartoon illustrating the splitting strategy to form SpyLigase from the CnaB2 domain. The two peptide tags, KTag (orange) with the reactive lysine and SpyTag (blue) with the reactive aspartic acid, can be ligated by the remaining protein domain (SpyLigase, green) by isopeptide bond formation. Active-site residues involved in the reaction are indicated (PDB 2X5P). (B) SDS-PAGE, Coomassie staining (top), and in-gel fluorescence (bottom) of the reduced Fc-fluorophore conjugates. Reactions were conducted with increasing concentration of SpyLigase (1, 3, and 10 mol eq. over Fc) and 10-fold excess of TAMRA-KTag. Control reactions (Ctrl) were performed by using 10 mol eq. of SpyLigase EQ. (C) Scheme of SpyLigase-mediated IgG1-Fc-SpyTag labeling using TAMRA-KTag.
Figure 2Overview of different cargoes of interest coupled to the N-terminus of KTag or SpyTag used in this study: (1) TAMRA-KTag, (2) Biotin-KTag, (3) TAMRA-SpyTag, (4) Biotin-SpyTag, (5) MMAE-nc-KTag (amide bond), (6) MMAE-nc-KTag (click chemistry), (7) MMAE-vc-KTag (click chemistry). Payloads 1–4 were subjected to SpyLigase-mediated IgG1-Fc conjugation whereas payloads 1 and 5–7 were used for conjugation to the antibody cetuximab as SpyTag fusion.
Figure 3Cytotoxicity induced by Spy-tagged cetuximab ADCs using EGFR overexpressing MDA-MB-468 and EGFR-negative MCF-7 breast cancer cell lines.
(A) In vitro cell killing of ADCs with non-cleavable (nc) MMAE payload 6 (■). (B) In vitro cell killing of ADCs with cleavable (vc) MMAE payload 7 (□). Incubation times were 3 days. Trastuzumab ADCs were used as isotype controls (○ and ●). Compound 6 (▼) and compound 7 (▲) were also assayed as controls. IC50 values were calculated as mean values from two independent experiments.