RESUMO
A rapid and effective method to identify disease-specific antibodies from clinical patients is important for understanding autoimmune diseases and for the development of effective disease therapies. In neuromyelitis optica (NMO), the identification of antibodies targeting the aquaporin-4 (AQP4) membrane protein traditionally involves the labor-intensive and time-consuming process of single B-cell sorting, followed by antibody cloning, expression, purification, and analysis for anti-AQP4 activity. To accelerate patient-specific antibody discovery, we compared two unique approaches for screening anti-AQP4 antibodies from yeast antibody surface display libraries. Our first approach, cell-based biopanning, has strong advantages for its cell-based display of native membrane-bound AQP4 antigens and is inexpensive and simple to perform. Our second approach, FACS screening using solubilized AQP4 antigens, permits real-time population analysis and precision sorting for specific antibody binding parameters. We found that both cell-based biopanning and FACS screening were effective for the enrichment of AQP4-binding clones. These screening techniques will enable library-scale functional interrogation of large natively paired antibody libraries for comprehensive analysis of anti-AQP4 antibodies in clinical samples and for robust therapeutic discovery campaigns.
RESUMO
Yeast display has become an important tool for modern biotechnology with many advantages for eukaryotic protein engineering. Antibody-based peptide interactions are often used to quantify yeast surface expression (e.g., by fusing a target protein to a FLAG, Myc, polyhistidine, or other peptide tag). However, antibody-antigen interactions require high stability for accurate quantification, and conventional tag systems based on such interactions may not be compatible with a low pH environment. In this study, a SNAP tag was introduced to a yeast display platform to circumvent disadvantages of conventional antibody display tags at low pH. SNAP forms a covalent bond with its small-molecule substrate, enabling precise and pH-independent protein display tagging. We compared the SNAP tag to conventional antibody-based peptide fusion and to direct fluorescent domain fusion using antibody fragment crystallizable (Fc) gene libraries as a case study in low pH protein engineering. Our results demonstrated that covalent SNAP tags can effectively quantify protein-surface expression at low pH, enabling the enrichment of Fc variants with increased affinity at pH 6.0 to the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). Incorporation of a covalent SNAP tag thus overcomes disadvantages of conventional antibody-based expression tags and enables protein-engineering applications outside of physiological pH.