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Improving antibody affinity through in vitro mutagenesis in complementarity determining regions.

Authors :
Wei Ye
Xiaoyu Liu
Ruiting He
Liming Gou
Ming Lu
Gang Yang
Jiaqi Wen
Xufei Wang
Fang Liu
Sujuan Ma
Weifeng Qian
Shaochang Jia
Tong Ding
Luan Sun
Wei Gao
Source :
Journal of Biomedical Research. May2022, Vol. 36 Issue 3, p155-166. 12p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

High-affinity antibodies are widely used in diagnostics and for the treatment of human diseases. However, most antibodies are isolated from semi-synthetic libraries by phage display and do not possess in vivo affinity maturation, which is triggered by antigen immunization. It is therefore necessary to engineer the affinity of these antibodies by way of in vitro assaying. In this study, we optimized the affinity of two human monoclonal antibodies which were isolated by phage display in a previous related study. For the 42A1 antibody, which targets the liver cancer antigen glypican-3, the variant T57H in the second complementarity-determining region of the heavy chain (CDR-H2) exhibited a 2.6-fold improvement in affinity, as well as enhanced cell-binding activity. For the I4A3 antibody to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, beneficial single mutations in CDR-H2 and CDR-H3 were randomly combined to select the best synergistic mutations. Among these, the mutation S53PS98T improved binding affinity (about 3.7 fold) and the neutralizing activity (about 12 fold) compared to the parent antibody. Taken together, single mutations of key residues in antibody CDRs were enough to increase binding affinity with improved antibody functions. The mutagenic combination of key residues in different CDRs creates additive enhancements. Therefore, this study provides a safe and effective in vitro strategy for optimizing antibody affinity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
*SARS-CoV-2
*MUTAGENESIS

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16748301
Volume :
36
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Biomedical Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
158295595
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7555/JBR.36.20220003