4.5 Article

Affinity maturation of a novel antagonistic human monoclonal antibody with a long VH CDR3 targeting the Class A GPCR formyl-peptide receptor 1

期刊

MABS
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 152-166

出版社

LANDES BIOSCIENCE
DOI: 10.4161/19420862.2014.985158

关键词

antibody engineering; affinity maturation; phage display; antibody crystal structure; homology modeling; long CDR; G-protein coupled receptor; formyl peptide receptor-1; GPCR; G-protein coupled receptor; scFv; single chain Fv fragment; IgG; immunoglobulin G; CDR; complementarity determining region; FPR; formyl peptide receptor; FMAT; fluorometric microvolume assay technology; FLIPR; Fluorescent Imaging Plate Reader; Fv; variable domain; MPL; magnetic proteoliposome; RIMMS; repetitive immunization at multiple sites; V-H; variable heavy; V-L; variable light

资金

  1. NanoMem Marie Curie Initial Training Network - European Commission within the 7th Framework Programme [317079]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies targeting G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are desirable for intervention in a wide range of disease processes. The discovery of such antibodies is challenging due to a lack of stability of many GPCRs as purified proteins. We describe here the generation of Fpro0165, a human anti-formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) antibody generated by variable domain engineering of an antibody derived by immunization of transgenic mice expressing human variable region genes. Antibody isolation and subsequent engineering of affinity, potency and species cross-reactivity using phage display were achieved using FPR1 expressed on HEK cells for immunization and selection, along with calcium release cellular assays for antibody screening. Fpro0165 shows full neutralization of formyl peptide-mediated activation of primary human neutrophils. A crystal structure of the Fpro0165 Fab shows a long, protruding V-H CDR3 of 24 amino acids and in silico docking with a homology model of FPR1 suggests that this long V-H CDR3 is critical to the predicted binding mode of the antibody. Antibody mutation studies identify the apex of the long V-H CDR3 as key to mediating the species cross-reactivity profile of the antibody. This study illustrates an approach for antibody discovery and affinity engineering to typically intractable membrane proteins such as GPCRs.

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