| Literature DB >> 32872428 |
Irina A Ishina1, Ioanna N Filimonova1, Maria Y Zakharova1,2, Leyla A Ovchinnikova1, Azad E Mamedov1, Yakov A Lomakin1, Alexey A Belogurov1,3.
Abstract
Effective and versatile screening of the peptide ligands capable of selectively binding to diverse receptors is in high demand for the state-of-the-art technologies in life sciences, including probing of specificity of the cell surface receptors and drug development. Complex microenvironment and structure of the surface receptors significantly reduce the possibility to determine their specificity, especially when in vitro conditions are utilized. Previously, we designed a publicly available platform for the ultra-high-throughput screening (uHTS) of the specificity of surface-exposed receptors of the living eukaryotic cells, which was done by consolidating the phage display and flow cytometry techniques. Here, we significantly improved this methodology and designed the fADL-1e-based phage vectors that do not require a helper hyperphage for the virion assembly. The enhanced screening procedure was tested on soluble human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II molecules and transgenic antigen-specific B cells that express recombinant lymphoid B-cell receptor (BCR). Our data suggest that the improved vector system may be successfully used for the comprehensive search of the receptor ligands in either cell-based or surface-immobilized assays.Entities:
Keywords: BCR; FACS; HLA-DRB1; M13 bacteriophage; MHC II; antigen-specific B cell; fd bacteriophage; filamentous phage; immunoglobulin selection; ligand–receptor interaction
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32872428 PMCID: PMC7504098 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21176258
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1(A) Vector map of the fADL-1e-based plasmid for the bacterial expression of the fd filamentous bacteriophage with the p3 protein N-terminally fused with peptide ligand and 3xFLAG or HA-tags flanked by the SG-linkers. The full vector sequences are available online (Addgene ID: 139441 (3xFLAG) and Addgene ID: 139440 (HA)); (B) Yield of the bacteriophage expression by the fADL-1e- and pHen2-transformed cells after 16 or 24 h of incubation at 30 or 37 °C; (C) Level of the 3xFLAG-p3 in the bacteriophages (109 particles/mL) produced by the fADL-1e- or pHen2-hyperphage-based systems measured by ELISA.
Figure 2Detection of the receptor-ligand interaction with the fADL-1e-based and pHen2-produced bacteriophages. Ligand–receptor interaction was studied by the flow cytometry using Raji cells expressing a membrane-tethered BCR in a single-chain format (Raji-FL cells), and filamentous bacteriophages carrying its peptide ligand (P#1). Non-transduced Raji and Raji-FL cells were incubated with filamentous phages exposing P#1-peptide fused with HA-tag (A) or 3xFLAG (B) at a concentration of 1 × 1012 or 5 × 1012 phage particles per mL for fADL-1e-based (right) or pHen2-based (left) protocols, respectively. Phages exposing irrelevant P#2 and P#3 peptides were used as a negative control. Fluorescence signals are plotted on the x-axis, and the percentage of the recorded events is on the y-axis. Histograms for pHen2-based + hyperphage system (left) show the cut-off gate at a false-positive signal level of 2%. Histograms for fADL-1e-based (right) show the cut-off gate at a false-positive signal level of 0.2%.
Figure 3Estimation of the minimal concentration of the ligand-carrying bacteriophage sufficient for the successful CyCLOPS technique. Ligand–receptor interaction was studied by the flow cytometry using Raji cells expressing a membrane-tethered BCR in a single-chain format (Raji-FL cells) and filamentous bacteriophages carrying its peptide ligand (P#1). Raji-FL cells were incubated with filamentous phages exposing P#1-peptide, irrelevant P#2 peptide, or a mixture of phages carrying P#1 and P#2 peptides in ratios of 1:1000, 1:500, and 1:100 at a final concentration of 1 × 1013 (A) or in a ratio of 1:100 and concentration of 2 × 1011–1 × 1013 phage particles per mL (B). Fluorescence signals are plotted on the x-axis, and the percentage of the recorded events is on the y-axis. Each histogram shows the cut-off gate at a false-positive signal level of 0.2%.
Figure 4Selection of the HLA class II ligands. (A) Binding of peptide ligands exposed on the phage particles by various recombinant HLA-DRB1 molecules (0101, HLA-DRB1*0101; 0103, HLA-DRB1*0103; 0401, HLA-DRB1*0401; 1101, HLA-DRB1*1101; 1501, HLA-DRB1*1501) measured by ELISA; (B) The HLA class II peptide epitope selection by fADL-1e-based (left) and pHen2-based (right) phage display. Ligand–receptor interaction was studied by incubating the recombinant HLA-DR1 (in complex with HLA-DM) with its peptide ligand (P#4) itself or in mixture with irrelevant peptide P#1 (P#4/P#1 ratio 1:100) exposed on the surface of the filamentous bacteriophage. Phages exposing only irrelevant P#1 peptide were used as a negative control. Afterwards, the phage-HLA complexes were captured by anti-MHC II antibodies. After extensive washing steps, the E. coli TG1 cells were infected with the eluted phages. The CFU of the last wash and eluate were estimated for each selection experiment. Ratio of the CFU of eluate versus last wash (n = 3) are plotted on the logarithmic y-axis. A ratio greater than one order of magnitude indicates effective selection; (C,D) Cell-based detection of the HLA II–ligand interaction with the fADL-1e based bacteriophages by flow cytometry. Non-transduced dendritic cells (DC) and dendritic cells transduced with HLA-DRB1*01:01 (DC-DR1) were incubated with filamentous fADL-1e-based bacteriophages exposing P#1 or P#4 peptides at a concentration of 7 × 1012 phage particles per mL. Fluorescence signals are plotted on the x-axis, and either the percentage of the recorded events (histograms) (C) or FSC-H (contour plots) (D) is on the y-axis.