| Literature DB >> 31810248 |
Camille Martin1, Guillaume Brachet2,3, Cyril Colas4,5, Emilie Allard-Vannier6, Claire Kizlik-Masson3, Clara Esnault1, Renaud Respaud7, Caroline Denevault-Sabourin1, Igor Chourpa6, Valérie Gouilleux-Gruart2,3, Marie-Claude Viaud-Massuard1, Nicolas Joubert1.
Abstract
Fluorescent labelling of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is classically performed by chemical bioconjugation methods. The most frequent labelling technique to generate antibody-fluorophore conjugates (AFCs) involves the bioconjugation onto the mAb lysines of a dye bearing an N-hydroxysuccinimide ester or an isothiocyanate group. However, discrepancies between labelling experiments or kits can be observed, related to reproducibility issues, alteration of antigen binding, or mAb properties. The lack of information on labelling kits and the incomplete characterization of the obtained labelled mAbs largely contribute to these issues. In this work, we generated eight AFCs through either lysine or interchain cysteine cross-linking bioconjugation of green-emitting fluorophores (fluorescein or BODIPY) onto either trastuzumab or rituximab. This strategy allowed us to study the influence of fluorophore solubility, bioconjugation technology, and antibody nature on two known labelling procedures. The structures of these AFCs were thoroughly analyzed by mass spectroscopy, and their antigen binding properties were studied. We then compared these AFCs in vitro by studying their respective spectral properties and stabilities. The shelf stability profiles and sensibility to pH variation of these AFCs prove to be dye-, antibody- and labelling-technology-dependent. Fluorescence emission in AFCs was higher when lysine labelling was used, but cross-linked AFCs were revealed to be more stable. This must be taken into account for the design of any biological study involving antibody labelling.Entities:
Keywords: antibody–fluorophore conjugate; bioconjugation; fluorescence; labelling
Year: 2019 PMID: 31810248 PMCID: PMC6958397 DOI: 10.3390/ph12040176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Scheme 1Synthesis of compounds designed for bioconjugation from precursor 5: BODIPY-SGM 6a and Fluorescein-SGM 6b. Abbreviations: TFA = trifluoroacetic acid, NHS = N-hydroxysuccinimide, SGM = second generation maleimide, DIPEA = N,N-diisopropyléthylamine.
Scheme 2Bioconjugation reactions. (a) bioconjugation onto a native mAb (lysines) using N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester fluorophore resulting in a randomly functionalized AFC with an average of 1.5 fluorophores per mAb. (b) Bioconjugation onto a native mAb (disulfide bridges) using an SGM fluorogenic linker 6 and giving a cross-linked AFC with an average of 1.5 fluorophores per mAb. Abbreviations: BBS = borate buffer saline; TCEP = tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine; FLU = fluorescein.
Antibody–fluorophore conjugates (AFCs) obtained from interchain cysteine cross-linking or lysine bioconjugation technologies onto trastuzumab or rituximab with BODIPY or fluorescein dyes.
| Antibody | Compound Used for Bioconjugation | AFC |
|---|---|---|
| Trastuzumab | BODIPY-SGM | TTZ-SGM-BDP |
| Trastuzumab | Fluorescein-SGM | TTZ-SGM-FLU |
| Rituximab | BODIPY-SGM | RTX-SGM-BDP |
| Rituximab | Fluorescein-SGM | RTX-SGM-FLU |
| Trastuzumab | BODIPY-NHS | TTZ-BDP |
| Trastuzumab | Fluorescein-NHS | TTZ-FLU |
| Rituximab | BODIPY-NHS | RTX-BDP |
| Rituximab | Fluorescein-NHS | RTX-FLU |
Figure 1Relative abundance of labelled antibodies in each AFC according to their fluorophore-to-antibody ratio (FAR): (a) mAb-FLU 9b and 10b; (b) mAb-BDP 9a and 10a; (c) mAb-SGM-FLU/BDP 7a, 7b, 8a, and 8b. The average FAR is 1.5 for all AFCs. mAb = TTZ or RTX. Abbreviations: BDP = BODIPY; FLU = fluorescein; TTZ = trastuzumab; RTX = rituximab.
Figure 2Comparison of fluorescence emissions of cross-linked AFCs (blue curves) and lysine-functionalized AFCs (orange curves) after normalization: (A) BDP-labelled RTX; (B) FLU-labelled RTX; (C) BDP-labelled TTZ; (D) FLU-labelled TTZ. Lower and higher wavelength bands correspond to the intrinsic emission of antibody aromatic amino acids (mainly tryptophan) and conjugated fluorophore emission, respectively. The excitation wavelength was 275 nm. For easier comparison, the sample concentration was adjusted to 50 µg/mL of protein.