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1.
J Mol Biol ; 343(3): 685-701, 2004 Oct 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15465055

ABSTRACT

Here, we compare an antibody with the highest known engineered affinity (K(d)=270 fM) to its high affinity wild-type (K(d)=700 pM) through thermodynamic, kinetic, structural, and theoretical analyses. The 4M5.3 anti-fluorescein single chain antibody fragment (scFv) contains 14 mutations from the wild-type 4-4-20 scFv and has a 1800-fold increase in fluorescein-binding affinity. The dissociation rate is approximately 16,000 times slower in the mutant; however, this substantial improvement is offset somewhat by the association rate, which is ninefold slower in the mutant. Enthalpic contributions to binding were found by calorimetry to predominate in the differential binding free energy. The crystal structure of the 4M5.3 mutant complexed with antigen was solved to 1.5A resolution and compared with a previously solved structure of an antigen-bound 4-4-20 Fab fragment. Strikingly, the structural comparison shows little difference between the two scFv molecules (backbone RMSD of 0.6A), despite the large difference in affinity. Shape complementarity exhibits a small improvement between the variable light chain and variable heavy chain domains within the antibody, but no significant improvement in shape complementarity of the antibody with the antigen is observed in the mutant over the wild-type. Theoretical modeling calculations show electrostatic contributions to binding account for -1.2 kcal/mol to -3.5 kcal/mol of the binding free energy change, of which -1.1 kcal/mol is directly associated with the mutated residue side-chains. The electrostatic analysis reveals several mechanistic explanations for a portion of the improvement. Collectively, these data provide an example where very high binding affinity is achieved through the cumulative effect of many small structural alterations.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Monoclonal/chemistry , Antibodies, Monoclonal/metabolism , Antibody Affinity , Models, Theoretical , Protein Conformation , Amino Acid Sequence , Antibodies, Monoclonal/genetics , Calorimetry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Fluorescein/chemistry , Fluorescein/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Structure , Mutation , Protein Binding , Static Electricity , Thermodynamics
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 97(20): 10701-5, 2000 Sep 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10984501

ABSTRACT

Single-chain antibody mutants have been evolved in vitro with antigen-binding equilibrium dissociation constant K(d) = 48 fM and slower dissociation kinetics (half-time > 5 days) than those for the streptavidin-biotin complex. These mutants possess the highest monovalent ligand-binding affinity yet reported for an engineered protein by over two orders of magnitude. Optimal kinetic screening of randomly mutagenized libraries of 10(5)-10(7) yeast surface-displayed antibodies enabled a >1,000-fold decrease in the rate of dissociation after four cycles of affinity mutagenesis and screening. The consensus mutations are generally nonconservative by comparison with naturally occurring mouse Fv sequences and with residues that do not contact the fluorescein antigen in the wild-type complex. The existence of these mutants demonstrates that the antibody Fv architecture is not intrinsically responsible for an antigen-binding affinity ceiling during in vivo affinity maturation.


Subject(s)
Immunoglobulin Fragments/genetics , Immunoglobulin Fragments/immunology , Animals , Antibody Affinity , Antibody Specificity , Antigen-Antibody Reactions , Escherichia coli , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Library , Mice , Mutation , Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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