Abstract
ABSTRACTThe antigen binding sites of antibodies, and derivatives such as scFvs, consist of an immunoglobulin structural framework that anchors hypervariable loops, and that is arranged as a dimer of β-sandwiches (from the heavy and light chains) packing face-to-face. Yet, the naturally occurring dimer orientation of antibodies is not well suited for engineering rigid single-chain formats of increased stability and solubility, which are two key limitations of engineered antibodies. In this work, we computationally designed an extended 12-stranded β-sandwich as a rigid single-chain dimer of de novo immunoglobulin domains interacting through an alternative edge-to-edge arrangement. The extended β-sandwich was found to be hyperstable and structurally accurate as confirmed through X-ray crystallography. We functionalized this design by inserting a long EF-hand calcium-binding motif into the β-hairpin bridge between both domains, showing high metal-binding affinity while remaining soluble and stable in solution. Finally, we propose a few designs with two EF-hand motifs in either or the same side of the scaffold with high-confidence structure predictions; altogether suggesting the robustness and versatility of our scaffold to harbor long functional loops. Our extended β-sandwiches are structurally divergent to natural antibodies and open new avenues for incorporating multiple loop binding sites either for increased or bispecific activities.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory