| Literature DB >> 33808657 |
Marius Gramlich1, Henry C W Hays2, Scott Crichton2, Philipp D Kaiser1, Anne Heine1, Nicole Schneiderhan-Marra1, Ulrich Rothbauer1,3, Dieter Stoll1,4, Sandra Maier1, Anne Zeck1.
Abstract
Annexin-A1 (ANXA1) belongs to a class of highly homologous Ca2+-dependent phospholipid-binding proteins. Its structure consists of a core region composed of four homologous repeats arranged in a compact, hydrolysis-resistant structure and an N-terminal region with a Ca2+-dependent conformation. ANXA1 is involved in several processes, including cell proliferation, apoptosis, metastasis, and the inflammatory response. Therefore, the development of antibodies blocking selected regions on ANXA1 holds great potential for the development of novel therapeutics treating inflammatory and cancer diseases. Here, we report the interaction site between an ANXA1-specific antibody known to inhibit T cell activation without adverse cytotoxic effects and ANXA1 using amide hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS). For the epitope determination, we applied two bottom-up HDX-MS approaches with pepsin digestion in solution and immobilized on beads. Both strategies revealed the interaction region within domain III of ANXA1 in Ca2+-bound conformation. The antibody-binding region correlates with the hydrophobic binding pocket of the N-terminal domain formed in the absence of calcium. This study demonstrates that even cryptic and flexible binding regions can be studied by HDX-MS, allowing a fast and efficient determination of the binding sites of antibodies which will help to define a mode of action profile for their use in therapy.Entities:
Keywords: ANXA1; HDX-MS; annexin-A1; conformational epitope mapping; hydrogen–deuterium exchange; mass spectrometry; proteolysis-resistant protein
Year: 2021 PMID: 33808657 PMCID: PMC8006148 DOI: 10.3390/antib10010011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antibodies (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4468
Figure 1Binding affinities of anti-ANXA1 antibody. For surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy (SPR)-based affinity measurements, anti-ANXA1 antibody was immobilized via a covalently coupled anti-human IgG on a CM5 chip. Kinetic measurements were performed by injecting five concentrations of ANXA1 in presence and absence of calcium (holo (a), and apo (b), respectively) ranging from 1.6 to 25 nM. The obtained datasets were evaluated using the 1:1 Langmuir binding model. All measurements were performed in triplicate. Only one representative sensorgram is shown. The equilibrium dissociation constant in presence of calcium was determined to be 2.66 ± 0.02 nM, whereas the antibody did not bind to ANXA1 in the apo-state.
Figure 2ANXA1 deuteration kinetics. (a) Relative deuterium uptake of 180 partially overlapping peptic peptides of ANXA1 numbered from N- to C-terminus over time. (b) Examples of deuterium uptake kinetics at peptide level: peptide #3: V5SEFLKQAW13 (left panel) showed very fast uptake whereas peptide #30: V58KGVDEATIIDILTKRNNAQRQQIKAAY85 (right panel) showed a slowly increasing uptake. (c) Heat map of deuterium uptake mapped onto the ribbon crystal structure of human ANXA1 taken from PDBe (1AIN [24]) using PyMOL (v2.0.7 http://www.pymol.org (accessed on 24 December 2020) and HDExaminer (v2.5.0, http://massspec.com/hdexaminer (accessed on 24 December 2020)) with medium smoothing for the partially overlapping peptic peptides. Dark blue regions showed a very slow exchange kinetics, indicating a compact, hardly accessible structure.
Figure 3Epitope mapping of anti-ANXA1 by HDX mass spectrometry. (a) Differential deuterium uptake of ANXA1 alone and in complex with the anti-ANXA1 after different deuteration times and digestion with pepsin at 0 °C for 10 min. Partially overlapping peptic peptides are numbered from the N- to the C-terminus. High-confidence identification by mass, retention time, and charge was applied using a peptide library. (b) Examples of deuterium uptake plots for three peptides from the N-terminal region (I) and two epitope regions (II and III)) with and without antibody. * time point showing statistical differences with >95% confidence. (c) Heat map of anti-ANXA1 antibody epitope regions narrowed down after combining the data from all overlapping peptides and time points. The secondary structural behavior of the amino acids is illustrated based on the crystal structure of human ANXA1 (PDBe code: 1AIN [24]).
Figure 4Sequence coverage (100%) and coverage redundancy of the bead-based pepsin digestion (a) and the in-solution pepsin digestion (b). Identical peptides within the antibody–ANXA1 interaction region are depicted in yellow; peptides obtained in one of the two approaches only are shown in blue. Amino acids highlighted in red show the refined interaction region, with significant deuteration differences in the covering peptides.
Figure 5Crystal structures of ANXA1 with mapped epitope regions. (a) Ribbon diagram of human ANXA1 with calcium and mapped epitope regions (PDB code: 1AIN [24]). α-helices were named from A to E. Epitope regions showing >40% differences in deuterium uptake for bound and unbound ANXA1 are shown in dark red. Regions with 20–40% difference in deuterium uptake between the bound and unbound antibody state are drawn in light red. (b) Ribbon diagram of porcine ANXA1 in absence of calcium (right panel, PDB-code: 1HM6 [2]) and presence of calcium (left panel, PDB code: 1MCX [25]). Figure was generated using PyMOL (v2.0.7 http://www.pymol.org (accessed on 24 December 2020)).