Electron microscopy shows that binding of monoclonal antibody PT25-2 primes integrin αIIbβ3 for ligand binding

Author:

Nešić Dragana1,Bush Martin2,Spasic Aleksandar3ORCID,Li Jihong1,Kamata Tetsuji4,Handa Makoto5,Filizola Marta3ORCID,Walz Thomas2,Coller Barry S.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Blood and Vascular Biology and

2. Laboratory of Molecular Electron Microscopy, Rockefeller University, New York, NY;

3. Department of Structural and Chemical Biology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY; and

4. Department of Anatomy, School of Medicine, and

5. Center for Transfusion Medicine and Cell Therapy, Keio University, Tokyo, Japan

Abstract

The murine monoclonal antibody (mAb) PT25-2 induces αIIbβ3 to bind ligand and initiate platelet aggregation. The underlying mechanism is unclear, because previous mutagenesis studies suggested that PT25-2 binds to the αIIb β propeller, a site distant from the Arg-Gly-Asp–binding pocket. To elucidate the mechanism, we studied the αIIbβ3–PT25-2 Fab complex by negative-stain and cryo-electron microscopy (EM). We found that PT25-2 binding results in αIIbβ3 partially exposing multiple ligand-induced binding site epitopes and adopting extended conformations without swing-out of the β3 hybrid domain. The cryo-EM structure showed PT25-2 binding to the αIIb residues identified by mutagenesis but also to 2 additional regions. Overlay of the cryo-EM structure with the bent αIIbβ3 crystal structure showed that binding of PT25-2 creates clashes with the αIIb calf-1/calf-2 domains, suggesting that PT25-2 selectively binds to partially or fully extended receptor conformations and prevents a return to its bent conformation. Kinetic studies of the binding of PT25-2 compared with mAbs 10E5 and 7E3 support this hypothesis. We conclude that PT25-2 induces αIIbβ3 ligand binding by binding to extended conformations and by preventing the interactions between the αIIb and β3 leg domains and subsequently the βI and β3 leg domains required for the bent-closed conformation.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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