| Literature DB >> 28824615 |
Els Beirnaert1, Aline Desmyter2,3, Silvia Spinelli2,3, Marc Lauwereys1, Lucien Aarden4, Torsten Dreier1, Remy Loris5,6, Karen Silence1, Caroline Pollet1, Christian Cambillau2,3, Hans de Haard1.
Abstract
The activity of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a cytokine involved in inflammatory pathologies, can be inhibited by antibodies or trap molecules. Herein, llama-derived variable heavy-chain domains of heavy-chain antibody (VHH, also called Nanobodies™) were generated for the engineering of bivalent constructs, which antagonize the binding of TNF to its receptors with picomolar potencies. Three monomeric VHHs (VHH#1, VHH#2, and VHH#3) were characterized in detail and found to bind TNF with sub-nanomolar affinities. The crystal structures of the TNF-VHH complexes demonstrate that VHH#1 and VHH#2 share the same epitope, at the center of the interaction area of TNF with its TNFRs, while VHH#3 binds to a different, but partially overlapping epitope. These structures rationalize our results obtained with bivalent constructs in which two VHHs were coupled via linkers of different lengths. Contrary to conventional antibodies, these bivalent Nanobody™ constructs can bind to a single trimeric TNF, thus binding with avidity and blocking two of the three receptor binding sites in the cytokine. The different mode of binding to antigen and the engineering into bivalent constructs supports the design of highly potent VHH-based therapeutic entities.Entities:
Keywords: VHH; crystal structure; cytokine; inflammation; intramolecular binding; nanobody; tumor necrosis factor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28824615 PMCID: PMC5534440 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00867
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Data collection and refinement statistics.
| Data collection | TNF–VHH#1 | TNF–VHH#2 | TNF–VHH#3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein Data Base | 5m2i | 5m2j | 5m2m |
| Source | ESRF ID14-1 | ESRF ID14-1 | ESRF ID14-3 |
| Space group | P212121 | P63 | C2 |
| Cell (Å), angle (°) | |||
| No. monomers in the AU | 6 | 1 | 6 |
| Resolution limits (Å) | 50–2.15 (2.2–2.15) | 50–1.9 (1.95–1.9) | 30.0–2.3 (2.42–2.3) |
| 0.127 (1.11) | 0.035 (0.10) | 0.09 (0.32) | |
| CC1/2 | 0.997 (0.72) | 0.999 (0.98) | 0.999 (0.96) |
| Unique reflections | 100,770 (7,354) | 21,089 (1,499) | 62,613 (9,101) |
| Mean [(I)/SD(I)] | 8.8 (1.5) | 23.5 (11) | 11.2 (4.1) |
| Completeness (%) | 99.5 (95.6) | 97.9 (94.6) | 99.9 (99.9) |
| Multiplicity | 4.15 (4.0) | 2.9 (2.7) | 4.1 (4.0) |
| Resolution (Å) | 46.5–2.15 (2.21–2.15) | 48.3–1.9 (2.0–1.9) | 30.0–2.3 (2.36–2.3) |
| Number of reflections | 100,502 (2,376) | 21,089 (2,723) | 62,613 (4,594) |
| Number of protein/water atoms | 12,521/747 | 1,966/351 | 12,810/711 |
| Test set reflections | 5,026 (369) | 1,045 | 2,988 (231) |
| 0.208/0.238 (0.234/0.258) | 0.16/0.196 (0.16/20.0) | 0.211/0.248 (0.212/0.244) | |
| RMSD bonds (Å)/angles (°) | 0.008/1.17 | 0.010/1.11 | 0.008/1.11 |
| B-Wilson/B-mean (Å) | 36.5/44.2 | 15.6/19.8 | 35.1/44.5 |
| Ramachandran: preferred/allowed/outliers (%) | 96.4/3.1/0.5 | 97.6/2.4/0 | 95.8/3.7/0.5 |
Numbers between brackets refer to the highest resolution bin.
Potency (IC50) and affinity (KD) of monovalent and bivalent anti-TNF-Nanobody™ constructs.
| Nanobody linker | IC50 mean (nM) | IC50-SD (nM) | Ratio IC50 | Minimal linker length | Nr measures | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VHH#1 | 0.242 | 0.122 | 0.54 | 1 | 21 | |
| VHH#1-9GS-VHH#1 | 0.078 | 0.047 | 3.1 | 20 | 8 | |
| VHH#1-30GS-VHH#1 | 0.021 | 0.012 | 12 | 16 | ||
| VHH#2 | 0.748 | 0.153 | 0.13 | 1 | 27 | |
| VHH#2-9GS-VHH#2 | 0.236 | 0.049 | 3.2 | 18 | 4 | |
| VHH#2-30GS-VHH#2 | 0.015 | 0.005 | 50 | 21 | ||
| VHH#3 | 1.503 | 0.84 | 1.5 | 1 | 4 | |
| VHH#3-9GS-VHH#3 | 0.019 | – | 80 | 12 | 1 | |
| VHH#3-12GS-VHH#3 | 0.012 | 0.007 | 125 | 7 | ||
| VHH#1-9GS-VHH#3 | 0.059 | 0.018 | 1 | 20 | 13 | |
| VHH#3-9GS-VHH#1 | 0.006 | 0.002 | 10 | 9 | 8 | |
| Etanercept | 0.013 | 0.006 | – | 71 | ||
| Adalimumab | 0.127 | 0.058 | – | 67 | ||
| Infliximab | 0.144 | 0.061 | – | 68 |
GS, amino acid glycine–serine linker; VHH, variable-domain heavy-chain region.
Etanercept (Enbrel.
Ratio IC.
.
Figure 1Size exclusion chromatography of complexes of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) with the different formats of VHH. (A) 0.4 nmol TNF. (B) 1.3 nmol VHH#3. (C) 0.4 nmol TNF + 1.3 nmol VHH#3. (D) 0.7 nmol bivalent VHH#3 (VHH#3-12GS-VHH#3). (E) 0.4 nmol TNF + 1.3 nmol bivalent VHH#3 (VHH#3-12GS-VHH#3).
Figure 2Three-dimensional structures of the three tumor necrosis factor (TNF)–Nanobody™ complexes. (A) Complex TNF–VHH#1; TNF and VHH#1 surfaces are colored orange and red, respectively. Shown right: details of the interaction of VHH#1 with TNF; VHH#1 in ribbon representation. (B) Complex TNF–VHH#2; TNF and VHH#2 surfaces are colored orange and green, respectively. (C) Complex TNF–VHH#3; TNF and VHH#3 surfaces are colored orange and blue, respectively.
Figure 3The binding sites of the three Nanobodies™ on tumor necrosis factor (TNF) trimer. (A) Complex TNF–VHH#1. (B) Complex TNF–VHH#2. (C) Complex TNF–VHH#3. TNF-monomer surfaces are colored orange, violet, and yellow. The residues of the Nanobodies™ in interaction with TNF are displayed as blue surfaces.
Water accessible surface area (in Å2) of TNF or VHH covered when complexed.
| Part | VHH#1 | VHH#2 | VHH#3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| VHH | 1,246 | 745 | 736 |
| TNF trimer | 1,176 | 746 | 749 |
| TNF-monomer 1 | 902 | 571 | 749 |
| TNF-monomer 2 | 274 | 175 | – |
| CDR1 | 236 | 272 | 73 |
| CDR2 | 409 | 322 | 314 |
| CDR3 | 599 | 131 | 123 |
CDR, complementarity determining region; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; VHH, variable-domain heavy-chain region.
TNF residues in contact (d < 3.8 Å) with the three VHHs.
| TNF | Residues | VHH#1 | VHH#2 | VHH#3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | B | |||
| 21 | B | X | ||
| 22 | B | X | ||
| 23 | B | X | ||
| 24 | B | X | ||
| 25 | B | X | ||
| 65 | B | X | ||
| 66 | B | X | ||
| 67 | B | X | ||
| 70 | B | X | ||
| 72 | B | |||
| 73 | B | |||
| 74 | B | |||
| 77 | B | |||
| 79 | B | |||
| 81 | B | |||
| 83 | B | |||
| 83 | B | |||
| 88 | B | |||
| 89 | B | |||
| 90 | B | |||
| 91 | B | |||
| 92 | B | |||
| 97 | B | |||
| 107 | B | |||
| 135 | B | |||
| 136 | B | |||
| 137 | B | |||
| 138 | B | |||
| 139 | B | |||
| 140 | B | |||
| 141 | B | |||
| 115 | C | |||
| 145 | C | |||
| 146 | C | |||
| 147 | C |
Shaded boxes represent residues within TNF that are in contact with residues of the indicated Nanobody.
TNF, tumor necrosis factor; VHH, variable-domain heavy-chain region.
Figure 4The binding sites of the three Nanobodies™ and of the extracellular domain of the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor p55 (TNFR1) mapped on TNF. (A) VHH#1, VHH#2, and TNFR1. (B) VHH#3 and TNFR1. The TNF trimer surface is colored orange. The TNFR1 surface of a unique monomer is colored yellow. Surfaces of VHH#1, VHH#2, and VHH#3 are colored red, green, and blue, respectively. Note the superposition of the Nanobodies’ surfaces with those of TNFR1.
Figure 5Efficacy of Nanobodies™ in Tg197 mouse model. Human tumor necrosis factor (TNF) transgenic mice were treated at week 3 after birth (one week before arthritic symptoms develop, i.e., in a prophylactic setting) with bivalent anti-TNF/anti-albumin Nanobody™ constructs or etanercept biweekly. Arthritic scores were recorded weekly up to week 10. (A) Bivalent VHH#1 (VHH#1-9GS-HSA VHH-9GS-VHH#1) construct versus phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) control. (B) Bivalent VHH#3 (VHH#3-9GS-VHH#3-9GS-HSA VHH) construct versus PBS control. (C) Etanercept versus PBS control. (D) Results for all groups at week 10.