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A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches

Antibody-based drugs can be highly toxic, because they target normal tissue as well as tumor tissue. The pH value of the extracellular microenvironments around tumor tissues is lower than that of normal tissues. Therefore, antibodies that engage in pH-dependent binding at slightly acidic pH are cruc...

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Autores principales: Zou, Wenjun, Huang, Chuncui, Sun, Qing, Zhao, Keli, Gao, Huanyu, Su, Rong, Li, Yan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer International Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8686790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34956814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13205-021-03079-x
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author Zou, Wenjun
Huang, Chuncui
Sun, Qing
Zhao, Keli
Gao, Huanyu
Su, Rong
Li, Yan
author_facet Zou, Wenjun
Huang, Chuncui
Sun, Qing
Zhao, Keli
Gao, Huanyu
Su, Rong
Li, Yan
author_sort Zou, Wenjun
collection PubMed
description Antibody-based drugs can be highly toxic, because they target normal tissue as well as tumor tissue. The pH value of the extracellular microenvironments around tumor tissues is lower than that of normal tissues. Therefore, antibodies that engage in pH-dependent binding at slightly acidic pH are crucial for improving the safety of antibody-based drugs. Thus, we implemented a stepwise mutagenesis approach to engineering pH-dependent antibodies capable of selective binding in the acidic microenvironment in this study. The first step involved single-residue histidine scanning mutagenesis of the antibody's complementarity-determining regions to prescreen for pH-dependent mutants and identify ionizable sensitive hot-spot residues that could be substituted by acidic amino acids to obtain pH-dependent antibodies. The second step involved single-acidic amino acid residue substitutions of the identified residues and the assessment of pH-dependent binding. We identified six ionizable sensitive hot-spot residues using single-histidine scanning mutagenesis. Nine pH-dependent antibodies were isolated using single-acidic amino acid residue mutagenesis at the six hot-spot residue positions. Relative to wild-type anti-CEA chimera antibody, the binding selectivity of the best performing mutant was improved by approximately 32-fold according to ELISA and by tenfold according to FACS assay. The mutant had a high affinity in the pH range of 5.5–6.0. This study supports the development of pH-dependent protein switches and increases our understanding of the role of ionizable residues in protein interfaces. The stepwise mutagenesis approach is rapid, general, and robust and is expected to produce pH-sensitive protein affinity reagents for various applications.
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spelling pubmed-86867902021-12-21 A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches Zou, Wenjun Huang, Chuncui Sun, Qing Zhao, Keli Gao, Huanyu Su, Rong Li, Yan 3 Biotech Original Article Antibody-based drugs can be highly toxic, because they target normal tissue as well as tumor tissue. The pH value of the extracellular microenvironments around tumor tissues is lower than that of normal tissues. Therefore, antibodies that engage in pH-dependent binding at slightly acidic pH are crucial for improving the safety of antibody-based drugs. Thus, we implemented a stepwise mutagenesis approach to engineering pH-dependent antibodies capable of selective binding in the acidic microenvironment in this study. The first step involved single-residue histidine scanning mutagenesis of the antibody's complementarity-determining regions to prescreen for pH-dependent mutants and identify ionizable sensitive hot-spot residues that could be substituted by acidic amino acids to obtain pH-dependent antibodies. The second step involved single-acidic amino acid residue substitutions of the identified residues and the assessment of pH-dependent binding. We identified six ionizable sensitive hot-spot residues using single-histidine scanning mutagenesis. Nine pH-dependent antibodies were isolated using single-acidic amino acid residue mutagenesis at the six hot-spot residue positions. Relative to wild-type anti-CEA chimera antibody, the binding selectivity of the best performing mutant was improved by approximately 32-fold according to ELISA and by tenfold according to FACS assay. The mutant had a high affinity in the pH range of 5.5–6.0. This study supports the development of pH-dependent protein switches and increases our understanding of the role of ionizable residues in protein interfaces. The stepwise mutagenesis approach is rapid, general, and robust and is expected to produce pH-sensitive protein affinity reagents for various applications. Springer International Publishing 2021-12-20 2022-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8686790/ /pubmed/34956814 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13205-021-03079-x Text en © King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology 2021
spellingShingle Original Article
Zou, Wenjun
Huang, Chuncui
Sun, Qing
Zhao, Keli
Gao, Huanyu
Su, Rong
Li, Yan
A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title_full A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title_fullStr A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title_full_unstemmed A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title_short A stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly pH-dependent protein switches
title_sort stepwise mutagenesis approach using histidine and acidic amino acid to engineer highly ph-dependent protein switches
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8686790/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34956814
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13205-021-03079-x
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