| Literature DB >> 32868832 |
Miklos Guttman1, Neal N Padte2, Yaoxing Huang2, Jian Yu2, Gabriel J Rocklin3, Brian D Weitzner4,5, Michele Scian6, David D Ho2, Kelly K Lee6.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibody (mAb) 10E8 recognizes a highly conserved epitope on HIV and is capable of neutralizing > 95% of circulating viral isolates making it one of the most promising Abs against HIV. Solution instability and biochemical heterogeneity of 10E8 has hampered its development for clinical use. We identify the source of 10E8 heterogeneity being linked to cis/trans isomerization at two prolines within the YPP motif in the CRD3 loop that exists as two predominant conformers that interconvert on a slow timescale. The YtransP conformation conformer can bind the HIV gp41 epitope, while the YcisP is not binding competent and shows a higher aggregation propensity. The high barrier of isomerization and propensity to adopt non-binding competent proline conformers provides novel insight into the slow binding kinetics, low potency, and poor solubility of 10E8. This study highlights how proline isomerization should be considered a critical quality attribute for biotherapeutics with paratopes containing potential cis proline amide bonds.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32868832 PMCID: PMC7458915 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-71184-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) SEC trace of Ab 10E8 showing the three isomeric peaks using a Sepax SRT-300 (A) or SRT-C 300 column (B). The later was designed to minimize secondary hydrophobic interactions with the column matrix. The relative percentage based on UV absorbance is shown above each peak. Gray arrows indicate the expected elution time based on molecular weight standards. (C) ELISA of gp41 binding of each isolated SEC peak showing that peak 3 has the highest affinity for gp41, while peak 1 shows weak binding.
Figure 2(A) 10E8 isomers were partially resolved by SEC over superdex S200 and analyzed online with SAXS. The two halves of the split peak showed no significant differences in their scattering profiles (B) and the radius of gyration was consistent for all species (C).
Figure 3LC–MS of peptic digests of the WSGYPPGEE peptide peak using C18 reverse phase chromatography of either the stock (unfractionated 10E8, top), SEC peaks 1–3, and aggregated 10E8 (bottom). The relative intensities extracted from the LC–MS data are shown above each peak.
Figure 4(A) 2D 1H–13C HSQC NMR spectra of 10E8 CDRH3 peptide WSGYPPGEE at pH 7.0 with assigned cross peaks labeled. The peaks corresponding to the peptide conformations with YtransPtransP, YcisPtransP, and YtransPcisP are shown in black, red, and orange, respectively. The aromatic region of the spectrum is shown in (B) with the same labeling, though cross peaks for the YtransPcisP conformation could not be assigned. The populations estimated from relative peak intensities are shown in the inset. (C) Structure of the 10E8 Fab (PDB 4G6F) with all 29 prolines in the Fab shown as orange spheres. The zoomed view of the CDRH3 loop contacting the gp41 shows key residues and the isomeric state of each proline peptide bond. (D) Schematic of the various conformers of 10E8 defined by the proline isomerization state within CDRH3. Numbers above each of the states reflect the percentage present by NMR at either pH 7.0 or 5.5. The cis/cis conformation was not detected (nd). The trans/trans conformation is the most abundant in solution, the cis/trans conformation that is susceptible to aggregation, while the trans/cis is the conformation that is binding competent for gp41.