The isolation of nanobodies from pre-immune libraries by means of biopanning is a straightforward process. Nevertheless, the recovered candidates often require optimization to improve some of their biophysical characteristics. In principle, CDRs are not mutated because they are likely to be part of the antibody paratope, but in this work, we describe a mutagenesis strategy that specifically addresses CDR1. Its sequence was identified as an instability hot spot by the PROSS program, and the available structural information indicated that four CDR1 residues bound directly to the antigen. We therefore modified the loop flexibility with the addition of an extra glycine rather than by mutating single amino acids. This approach significantly increased the nanobody yields but traded-off with moderate affinity loss. Accurate modeling coupled with atomistic molecular dynamics simulations enabled the modifications induced by the glycine insertion and the rationale behind the engineering design to be described in detail.

Orlando, M., Fortuna, S., Oloketuyi, S., Bajc, G., Goldenzweig, A., de Marco, A. (2021). CDR1 composition can affect nanobody recombinant expression yields. BIOMOLECULES, 11(9) [10.3390/biom11091362].

CDR1 composition can affect nanobody recombinant expression yields

Orlando M.
Primo
;
2021

Abstract

The isolation of nanobodies from pre-immune libraries by means of biopanning is a straightforward process. Nevertheless, the recovered candidates often require optimization to improve some of their biophysical characteristics. In principle, CDRs are not mutated because they are likely to be part of the antibody paratope, but in this work, we describe a mutagenesis strategy that specifically addresses CDR1. Its sequence was identified as an instability hot spot by the PROSS program, and the available structural information indicated that four CDR1 residues bound directly to the antigen. We therefore modified the loop flexibility with the addition of an extra glycine rather than by mutating single amino acids. This approach significantly increased the nanobody yields but traded-off with moderate affinity loss. Accurate modeling coupled with atomistic molecular dynamics simulations enabled the modifications induced by the glycine insertion and the rationale behind the engineering design to be described in detail.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
In silico modeling; Nanobody CDRs; Nanobody engineering; Rational mutagenesis;
English
2021
11
9
1362
open
Orlando, M., Fortuna, S., Oloketuyi, S., Bajc, G., Goldenzweig, A., de Marco, A. (2021). CDR1 composition can affect nanobody recombinant expression yields. BIOMOLECULES, 11(9) [10.3390/biom11091362].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/512819
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