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Development, Optimization, and Structural Characterization of an Efficient Peptide-Based Photoaffinity Cross-Linking Reaction for Generation of Homogeneous Conjugates from Wild-Type Antibodies

Authors :
Nicholas Vance
Neelie Zacharias
Mark Ultsch
Guangmin Li
Aimee Fourie
Peter Liu
Julien LaFrance-Vanasse
James A. Ernst
Wendy Sandoval
Katherine R. Kozak
Gail Phillips
Weiru Wang
Jack Sadowsky
Source :
Bioconjugate chemistry. 30(1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Site-specific conjugation of small molecules to antibodies represents an attractive goal for the development of more homogeneous targeted therapies and diagnostics. Most site-specific conjugation strategies require modification or removal of antibody glycans or interchain disulfide bonds or engineering of an antibody mutant that bears a reactive handle. While such methods are effective, they complicate the process of preparing antibody conjugates and can negatively impact biological activity. Herein we report the development and detailed characterization of a robust photoaffinity cross-linking method for site-specific conjugation to fully glycosylated wild-type antibodies. The method employs a benzoylphenylalanine (Bpa) mutant of a previously described 13-residue peptide derived from phage display to bind tightly to the Fc domain; upon UV irradiation, the Bpa residue forms a diradical that reacts with the bound antibody. After the initial discovery of an effective Bpa mutant peptide and optimization of the reaction conditions to enable efficient conjugation without concomitant UV-induced photodamage of the antibody, we assessed the scope of the photoconjugation reaction across different human and nonhuman antibodies and antibody mutants. Next, the specific site of conjugation on a human antibody was characterized in detail by mass spectrometry experiments and at atomic resolution by X-ray crystallography. Finally, we adapted the photoconjugation method to attach a cytotoxic payload site-specifically to a wild-type antibody and showed that the resulting conjugate is both stable in plasma and as potent as a conventional antibody-drug conjugate in cells, portending well for future biological applications.

Details

ISSN :
15204812
Volume :
30
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bioconjugate chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c8ca2f0a00e1caf74a5840b230121d29