| Literature DB >> 31301102 |
Szymon Stelter1, Mathew J Paul1, Audrey Y-H Teh1, Melanie Grandits1, Friedrich Altmann2, Jessica Vanier3, Muriel Bardor3,4, Alexandra Castilho5, Rachel Louise Allen6, Julian K-C Ma1.
Abstract
Plants can provide a cost-effective and scalable technology for production of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, with the potential for precise engineering of glycosylation. Glycan structures in the antibody Fc region influence binding properties to Fc receptors, which opens opportunities for modulation of antibody effector functions. To test the impact of glycosylation in detail, on binding to human Fc receptors, different glycovariants of VRC01, a broadly neutralizing HIV monoclonal antibody, were generated in Nicotiana benthamiana and characterized. These include glycovariants lacking plant characteristic α1,3-fucose and β1,2-xylose residues and glycans extended with terminal β1,4-galactose. Surface plasmon resonance-based assays were established for kinetic/affinity evaluation of antibody-FcγR interactions, and revealed that antibodies with typical plant glycosylation have a limited capacity to engage FcγRI, FcγRIIa, FcγRIIb and FcγRIIIa; however, the binding characteristics can be restored and even improved with targeted glycoengineering. All plant-made glycovariants had a slightly reduced affinity to the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) compared with HEK cell-derived antibody. However, this was independent of plant glycosylation, but related to the oxidation status of two methionine residues in the Fc region. This points towards a need for process optimization to control oxidation levels and improve the quality of plant-produced antibodies.Entities:
Keywords: CD16; CD64; Fc receptor; FcRn; antibody; fucose; glycoengineering; methionine oxidation; molecular pharming; neonatal Fc receptor; plant
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31301102 PMCID: PMC6953194 DOI: 10.1111/pbi.13207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant Biotechnol J ISSN: 1467-7644 Impact factor: 9.803
Percentage composition of N‐glycan populations on the heavy chains of different VRC01 glycovariants
| VRC01 HEK | VRC01 WT | VRC01 ∆XF | VRC01 Gal | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GnGnF6 | 70.5% | GnGnXF3 | 54.1% | GnGn | 74.6% | unglyc. | 29.4% |
| GnAF6 | 17.2% | unglyc. | 35.9% | unglyc. | 21.1% | MA + Man4Gn | 28.7% |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Man4A + Man5Gn | 10.8% |
|
|
|
|
| Man5A | 9.9% | ||
|
|
|
|
| MGn | 9.3% | ||
|
|
|
|
| AA | 7.8% | ||
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||
|
|
| ||||||
Structures and abbreviations of N‐glycans which constitute <5% of the total population have been formatted in bold. Unglyc.–unglycosylated heavy chain. Abbreviations according to the ProGlycAn nomenclature (http://www.proglycan.com/protein-glycosylation-analysis/nomenclature).
Figure 1Interaction of VRC01 glycovariants with recombinant human FcγRI and FcγRIIIa. (a) SPR sensorgrams illustrate binding and dissociation of antibody–receptor complexes. Data were analysed with a 1 : 1 binding interaction model for FcγRI (except VRC01; see text for details) and a two‐state reaction interaction model for FcγRIIIa. Dashed line denotes maximum response upon saturation. Theoretical saturation level is displayed separately as a solid line if it differs or could not be extrapolated from the data. Receptor concentrations used: FcγRI at 2–240 nm (15–480 nm for VRC01aglyco), and FcγRIIIa at 125–4000 nm for fucosylated antibodies and 12–800 nm for afucosylated ones. Data shown are from one experiment representative of at least two technical repeats. (b) Kinetic map for the interaction of antibodies with FcγRI based on association rate (on‐rate) and dissociation rate (off‐rate) constants. For VRC01, the kinetics parameters of the glycosylated portion were used. (c) Half‐life of the antibody–FcγRI complexes as calculated from the dissociation rate constants.
Figure 2Affinity of VRC01 glycovariants to the human FcγRIIa and FcγRIIb. SPR sensorgrams show binding responses at the injection of different receptor concentrations (0.5–8 μm) over the Protein A‐captured antibodies. Dissociation constants are calculated from steady‐state responses at a dynamic equilibrium of complex formation. Maximum response at the saturation level is marked with dashed horizontal lines. When the experimentally measured response at saturation does not overlap with expected response, theoretical saturation levels are indicated with solid horizontal lines. Data shown are from one experiment representative of at least two technical repeats.
Figure 3Affinity of VRC01 glycovariants to human FcγRs. The graph summarizes the affinity values (K) for the interaction of different glycovariants with human FcγRI, FcγRIIa, FcγRIIb and FcγRIIIa.
Figure 4Binding of monomeric VRC01 glycovariants to cell‐surface Fc receptors on THP‐1 monocytes. (a) Flow cytometric analysis with FITC‐conjugated antibodies specific to FcγRI, FcγRII or FcγRIII on the surface of THP‐1 cells (red histograms) as compared to the isotype controls (blue histograms). The numbers indicate mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) of the populations. (b) Binding of serially diluted VRC01 antibodies to THP‐1 cells was detected with a FITC‐labelled F(ab’)2 fragment against human antibodies using flow cytometry. MFI responses were corrected by subtracting background response levels from cells incubated with the FITC‐labelled F(ab’)2 fragment only (no VRC01). Nonlinear regression curve fit was applied. The results represent one of two biological repeats. (c) FcγRIIIa activation by VRC01, VRC01Δ and VRC01 was demonstrated by luciferase activity of ADCC Bioassay Reporter cells. Antibodies were pre‐incubated with HIV‐1 UG37 gp140 before effector cells (Jurkat NFAT‐luc) were added. Luciferase activity was the average result of three independent experimental repeats. Error bars equals ± SD and PBS was used as negative control. * VRC01Δ at 10 μg/mL was omitted because the readings exceeded the range of the assay.
Figure 5Binding analysis of VRC01 glycovariants to FcRn. (a) Human recombinant FcRn ectodomains were covalently immobilized on the CM5 sensor chip surface and different VRC01 glycovariants were injected at 200 nm concentration in duplicate. Data shown are from one experiment representative of at least two technical repeats. Binding and dissociation of different antibodies was observed at pH 6.0, and the FcRn surface was regenerated with PBS (pH 7.4). (b) Each VRC01 glycovariant was captured onto the anti‐human Fab surface to the same level and tested for binding to 200 nm FcRn. Sensorgrams represent binding and dissociation at pH 6.0 for two independent repeats. Maximum binding level is marked with a dashed horizontal line.
Figure 6Methionine oxidation of VRC01 glycovariants. (a) Percentage oxidation of Met252 and Met428 on antibody heavy chains, as determined by mass spectrometry. All plant‐made VRC01 glycovariants were produced at the same time under the same conditions and stored in nonoxidizing atmosphere. Data shown are from one experiment representative of at three biological repeats. (b) Relative affinity of plant‐made VRC01 glycovariants to FcRn compared to VRC01. Values obtained from SPR analysis.