4.7 Article

Malachite Green Mediates Homodimerization of Antibody VL Domains to Form a Fluorescent Ternary Complex with Singular Symmetric Interfaces

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 425, Issue 22, Pages 4595-4613

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2013.08.014

Keywords

fluorogen activating protein; quaternary structure; cooperative binding; directed evolution; yeast surface display

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [8U54GM103529-08]

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We report that a symmetric small-molecule ligand mediates the assembly of antibody light chain variable domains (V(L)s) into a correspondent symmetric ternary complex with novel interlaces. The L5* fluorogen activating protein is a V-L domain that binds malachite green (MG) dye to activate intense fluorescence. Crystallography of liganded L5* reveals a 2:1 protein:ligand complex with inclusive C2 symmetry, where MG is almost entirely encapsulated between an antiparallel arrangement of the two V-L domains. Unliganded L5* V-L domains crystallize as a similar antiparallel V-L/V-L homodimer. The complementarity-determining regions are spatially oriented to form novel VL/VL and V-L/ligand interfaces that tightly constrain a propeller conformer of MG. Binding equilibrium analysis suggests highly cooperative assembly to form a very stable V-L/MG/V-L complex, such that MG behaves as a strong chemical inducer of dimerization. Fusion of two V-L domains into a single protein tightens MG binding over 1000-fold to low picomolar affinity without altering the large binding enthalpy, suggesting that bonding interactions with ligand and restriction of domain movements make independent contributions to binding. Fluorescence activation of a symmetrical fluorogen provides a selection mechanism for the isolation and directed evolution of ternary complexes where unnatural symmetric binding interlaces are favored over canonical antibody interfaces. As exemplified by L5*, these self-reporting complexes may be useful as modulators of protein association or as high-affinity protein tags and capture reagents. (C) 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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