| Literature DB >> 30307368 |
T Noelle Lombana1, Marissa L Matsumoto2, Amy M Berkley3, Evangeline Toy3, Ryan Cook4, Yutian Gan5, Changchun Du4, Paul Schnier5, Wendy Sandoval5, Zhengmao Ye4, Jill M Schartner3, Jeong Kim6, Christoph Spiess1.
Abstract
As an immune evasion strategy, <span class="Gene">MICA and <span class="Gene">MICB, the major histocompatibility complex class I homologs, are proteolytically cleaved from the surface of cancer cells leading to impairment of CD8 + T cell- and natural killer cell-mediated immune responses. Antibodies that inhibit MICA/B shedding from tumors have therapeutic potential, but the optimal epitopes are unknown. Therefore, we developed a high-resolution, high-throughput glycosylation-engineered epitope mapping (GEM) method, which utilizes site-specific insertion of N-linked glycans onto the antigen surface to mask local regions. We apply GEM to the discovery of epitopes important for shedding inhibition of MICA/B and validate the epitopes at the residue level by alanine scanning and X-ray crystallography (Protein Data Bank accession numbers 6DDM (1D5 Fab-MICA*008), 6DDR (13A9 Fab-MICA*008), 6DDV (6E1 Fab-MICA*008). Furthermore, we show that potent inhibition of MICA shedding can be achieved by antibodies that bind GEM epitopes adjacent to previously reported cleavage sites, and that these anti-MICA/B antibodies can prevent tumor growth in vivo.Entities:
Keywords: FPOP; alanine scan; antibody characterization; antibody discovery; binding interface; epitope mapping
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30307368 PMCID: PMC6343778 DOI: 10.1080/19420862.2018.1532767
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MAbs ISSN: 1942-0862 Impact factor: 5.857
Figure 1.Anti-MICA antibodies binned by traditional epitope competition experiments elicit a range of shedding inhibition. (A-D) 59 anti-MICA antibodies that bind MICA*002, *004 and *008 and MICB*005 were characterized by competition binding studies. Orange depicts antibody clone 1D5, green 13A9 and blue 6E1. (A) Antibodies do not show a correlation between ability to prevent MICA*008 shedding and affinity to MICA*008. (B) Epitope binning by array-based SPR (Wasatch) competition of anti-MICA antibodies categorizes them into three distinct MICA*008 epitope bins. (C) The three epitope bins determined by antibody competition do not correlate to MICA*008 affinity. (D) The anti-MICA antibodies show a correlation between MICA*008 epitope bin and ability to inhibit shedding. Bin 1 contains the anti-MICA antibodies that inhibit shedding the most, while bin 3 contains those that inhibit shedding the least.
Figure 2.Glycosylation-engineered epitope mapping can finely map an antibody epitope location. (A) Schematic of the glycosylation-engineered epitope mapping (GEM) method. GEM variants are created by introducing a single N-linked glycosylation site (N-X-S/T, X ≠ P) into a protein antigen. The GEM variants are screened for binding to an antibody panel by ELISA. An epitope is defined when loss of binding is observed due to the GEM site being masked by N-linked glycosylation. Antibodies are then grouped into similar high-resolution epitope mapping bins. (B) Cartoon representation of the HER2 ECD (PDB: 1N8Z) crystal structure shows colored spheres at the Asn residue for the 10 engineered N-linked glycosylation sites. Five GEM sites in domain II are predicted to be hum2C4 epitopes, while five sites in domain IV are predicted to be hum4D5 epitopes. (C) Differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) of HER2 GEM variants shows similar stability to human (Hu) HER2 ECD alone or Hu IgG1 Fc alone. (D) ELISA heat map showing binding of anti-HER2 antibodies hum2C4, hum4D5 and hum7C2 to BSA, wild-type (WT) Hu HER2 ECD or 10 GEM variants. The predicted epitope of each HER2 GEM variant is also indicated. White boxes represent binding, dark gray boxes represent no binding and light gray boxes represent < 30% binding. No binding is defined as ≤ 3 standard deviations of the average BSA controls per plate.
Glycopeptide mapping of HER2 GEM variants.
| WT | V308N | S310N | L317N. | H318N.Q320T | K333N | E580N.D582S | Q583N.V585S | F595N. | E620N. | A622N.Q624T | Tryptic/Chymotryptic/AspN Peptide(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LSTD | |||||||||||
| DVG | |||||||||||
| CE | |||||||||||
| GP | |||||||||||
| GPEAD | |||||||||||
| DPP | |||||||||||
| DE | |||||||||||
| EEG | |||||||||||
| 1% | SCSVMHEALH |
*Peptide with 1 mis-cleavage identified.
**Doubly deamidated peptide identified (N620 & N629). Singly deamidated peptide identified at N629 (72%).
***Doubly deamidated peptide identified (N622 & N629). Singly deamidated peptide identified at N629 (99%).
#N865 is a non-N-linked glycosylated peptide control that shows false positive error rates of 0–2%.
Figure 3.GEM identifies anti-MICA epitopes correlated with strong shedding inhibition activity. (A) Cartoon representation of the MICA*001 α3 domain crystal structure (PDB: 1HYR) shows (left) previously reported cleavage sites of MICA in yellow or (right) the location of the seven individual MICA*008 GEM variants in colored spheres with the exact substitutions indicated. (B) ELISA heat map of 59 anti-MICA antibodies and their ability to bind to the seven glycosylation-engineered MICA*008 variants. White boxes indicate binding and colored boxes represent a loss of binding of at least 60 %. Eight bins (bins A-H) are identified using the GEM method for the anti-MICA antibodies, and the number of anti-MICA antibodies per bin is indicated. Three bins (bins A, B and D) show ≥ 70% shedding inhibition of MICA*008, and the epitope bin by traditional antibody competition is also shown. (C) All glycosylation site mutations used in GEM are mapped onto the ‘front’ and ‘back’ surface of the MICA*008 α3 domain structure (from the complex with the 13A9 Fab in Figure 6B). GEM positions defining epitope bins A-H in (B) are mapped onto the surface of the structure and colored according to (A and B). Epitope bins containing antibodies demonstrating 70% or greater inhibition of shedding are highlighted with boxes.
Glycopeptide mapping of MICA GEM variants.
| WT | R202N | E215N | N234 | G243N | H248N | R279N | N298.G299. | Chymotrypsin and/or GluC Peptide(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GS | ||||||||
| GSTVPPMV | ||||||||
| YPR | ||||||||
| RQDGVSLS | ||||||||
| Q | ||||||||
| HSG | ||||||||
| GLH |
*Doubly deamidated peptide identified (N210 & N215).
#N328 is a non-N-linked glycosylated peptide control that shows false positive error rates of 0–4%.
Figure 6.X-ray crystal structures of three distinct anti-MICA Fabs in complex with the MICA*008 α3 domain verify epitopes identified by GEM. The crystal structures of (A) the 1D5 Fab (orange) or (B) the 13A9 Fab (green) in complex with the MICA*008 α3 domain (gray cartoon) shows that both Fabs bind to the ‘front’ face of the α3 domain. (C) The crystal structure of the 6E1 Fab (blue) in complex with the MICA*008 C273S α3 domain (gray cartoon) shows that 6E1 binds to the ‘back’ face of the α3 domain. (D) Overlay of the crystal structures of the three anti-MICA Fabs in complex with the MICA*008 α3 domain, aligned relative to their α3 domains. The 1D5 Fab (orange) and the 13A9 Fab (green) bind to the ‘front’ face of the α3 domain and have overlapping epitopes, whereas the 6E1 Fab (blue) binds to the ‘back’ face.
Shedding inhibition and affinity of anti-MICA/B antibodies.
| MICA*002 | MICA*004 | MICA*008 | MICB*005 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PANC1 cell line | α3 | HCC1534 cell line | α3 | MEL-JUSO cell line | α3 | HCC1534 cell line | α3 | |||||
| Max % Inhibition | EC50 (µg/mL) | KD (nM) | Max % Inhibition | EC50 (µg/mL) | KD | Max % Inhibition | EC50 (µg/mL) | KD | Max % Inhibition | EC50 (µg/mL) | KD | |
| 1D5 | 48 | 0.0341 | 0.675 | 65 | 0.0136 | 0.486 | 74 | 0.0207 | 0.420 | 59 | 0.0386 | 1.09 |
| 13A9 | 66 | 0.4180 | 0.499 | 56 | 0.5990 | 1.55 | 50 | 0.7945 | 0.940 | 76 | 0.0349 | 0.968 |
| 6E1 | 23 | NP | 2.96 | 52 | 0.3298 | 8.42 | 45 | 0.1050 | 5.78 | 58 | 0.0724 | 5.75 |
Positive Cutoff for Maximum (Max) % Inhibition is defined as 3x the standard deviation of non-antibody treated samples per plate.
NP: Calculation was not possible for this EC50 value.
Figure 4.1D5 epitope identified by GEM is consistent with FPOP and alanine scanning. (A) MICA*008 α3 domain peptides that showed a change in oxidation by FPOP when bound to the 1D5 Fab compared to the α3 domain alone are mapped onto the crystal structure. These include the tryptic peptide N234-R240 (cyan) and the chymotryptic peptide V268-F280 (yellow). Residues that showed the greatest change in oxidation are labeled and their side chains are shown. (B) Surface-exposed residues on the ‘front face’ of the α3 domain included in the alanine scan are highlighted. Residues that retain binding to 2E5, an antibody that binds the ‘back face’ of MICA, when mutated to alanine are colored lime green. Residues that lose binding to both 1D5 and 2E5 when mutated to alanine are colored magenta and labeled. (C) Residues identified as part of the 1D5 epitope by alanine scanning are highlighted on the crystal structure. Residues that when mutated to alanine show a mild, moderate, strong or severe decrease in 1D5 binding are colored green, yellow, orange and red, respectively. (D) Comparison of the 1D5 epitope determined by GEM, FPOP and alanine scanning methods. Epitopes determined by the three techniques are colored orange, have their side chains shown as sticks, and residues labeled. For simplicity, only surface-exposed residues are labeled for the FPOP epitope.
Figure 5.Strong shedding inhibition of anti-MICA antibodies correlates with binding to GEM epitope bin A, which overlaps with known MICA cleavage sites. (A, top) The epitopes of the 1D5, 13A9, and 6E1 Fabs defined as MICA*008 α3 domain residues within 4.5 Å of the Fabs in the X-ray crystal structures are colored orange, green, or blue, respectively. (A, middle) The Fab epitopes determined by GEM are mapped onto the surface of the α3 domain structure. Residues that when mutated to introduce an N-linked glycosylation site cause a decrease in Fab binding are colored magenta, whereas residues that when mutated do not affect Fab binding are colored lime green. The outline of the 1D5, 13A9, and 6E1 Fab epitopes determined by X-ray crystallography are shown with an orange, green, or blue dotted line, respectively. Note that S297, the carboxy-terminal MICA*008 residue in the structure and part of the 13A9 crystallography epitope, is colored green as a surrogate for the GEM mutant N298.G299.S300, which had no effect on 13A9 binding. (A, bottom) Residues immediately N-terminal to reported MICA*001 α3 domain cleavage sites are colored yellow on the surface of the MICA*008 α3 domain structure. Crystallography epitopes are shown as in (A, middle). (B) Comparison of the co-crystal structures of the 1D5 Fab (orange) or 13A9 Fab (green) bound to the MICA*008 α3 domain (white cartoon). GEM residues Gly243 and Arg279 identified as epitopes are shown as spheres and colored magenta and blue, respectively.
Figure 7.Anti-MICA antibodies can prevent MICA shedding in vitro and show anti-tumor activity in a prevention model in vivo. (A) Shedding inhibition of MICA*008 and 004 alleles and MICB*005 allele are tested with anti-MICA antibodies 1D5, 6E1 and their combination. 1D5 and 6E1 bind non-overlapping epitopes on opposite sides of MICA α3 domain. For all three MICA/B alleles, we see an additive effect in preventing shedding with the 1D5 and 6E1 combination (boxed, solid line) compared to them individually (boxed, dashed line). (B) Treatment of HCC1534 cells in vitro with 1D5 IgG2a or 13A9 IgG2a leads to increased detection of endogenous surface MICA/B. Cells were plated at 12,500 cells per well in 96 well plate. Cells were either incubated with control IgG2a (dark gray, black dashed histogram), 1D5 IgG2a (blue histogram), or 13A9 IgG2a (red histogram) for 24 hours and then stained with anti-MICA/B or an isotype control (light gray histogram). (C) C1R, a human B cell line, was transfected with MICA*002 to generate C1R-MICA*002 for NK killing experiments. Freshly isolated NK cells from normal human donors were added to the C1R-MICA*002 target cells in a 10:1 ratio to assess the in vitro cytolytic activity. Antibodies were added at 10 µg/mL for the assay duration of 4 hrs. Parental C1R cells lacking MHC class I and MICA/B and C1R-MICA*002 cells without antibody treatment (-) served as controls. Data was acquired by flow cytometry following CD56 and 7AAD staining. The NK cytotoxicity was defined as percentage of CD56−7AAD+ in all CD56− target cells. The assay was done in duplicate with NK cells from two different donors. Representative data from one donor is shown. (D) Growth curves of individual HCC1534 tumors. Mice were treated with 10 mg/kg of indicated antibody following tumor cell inoculation. Gray shading indicates days of dosing range.