| Literature DB >> 31442220 |
Shira Warszawski1, Aliza Borenstein Katz2, Rosalie Lipsh1, Lev Khmelnitsky2, Gili Ben Nissan1, Gabriel Javitt2, Orly Dym3, Tamar Unger3, Orli Knop1, Shira Albeck3, Ron Diskin2, Deborah Fass2, Michal Sharon1, Sarel J Fleishman1.
Abstract
Antibodies developed for research and clinical applications may exhibit suboptimal stability, expressibility, or affinity. Existing optimization strategies focus on surface mutations, whereas natural affinity maturation also introduces mutations in the antibody core, simultaneously improving stability and affinity. To systematically map the mutational tolerance of an antibody variable fragment (Fv), we performed yeast display and applied deep mutational scanning to an anti-lysozyme antibody and found that many of the affinity-enhancing mutations clustered at the variable light-heavy chain interface, within the antibody core. Rosetta design combined enhancing mutations, yielding a variant with tenfold higher affinity and substantially improved stability. To make this approach broadly accessible, we developed AbLIFT, an automated web server that designs multipoint core mutations to improve contacts between specific Fv light and heavy chains (http://AbLIFT.weizmann.ac.il). We applied AbLIFT to two unrelated antibodies targeting the human antigens VEGF and QSOX1. Strikingly, the designs improved stability, affinity, and expression yields. The results provide proof-of-principle for bypassing laborious cycles of antibody engineering through automated computational affinity and stability design.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31442220 PMCID: PMC6728052 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Fig 5Substantial increase in antibody expression yields following AbLIFT design.
(a) Dot blot analysis showed no detectable expression for h492.1 in HEK293 cells, whereas all 20 designs showed detectable levels of expression. (b) Relative expression levels of the 20 designs using Western blot analysis. h492.1des3 and h492.1des18 showed high expression and were selected for further analysis. (c) QSOX1 inhibitory activity assay using the parental 492.1 antibody and two designs. The inhibitory activity was measured for each antibody in a sulfhydryl oxidase assay using a physiological concentration of QSOX1 (25 nM). h492.1des18 showed comparable inhibitory activity relative to the parental antibody, with only a slight decrease when provided at sub-stoichiometric amounts (10 nM). (d) The structural context of mutations in h492.1des18 (color) relative to the experimental structure of 492.1 (gray). Spheres indicate the locations of the mutations, and the thumbnail shows two of the four designed mutations, which improve interchain packing and rigidify the backbone at the vL-vH interface according to the model structure.