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Mapping Mechanostable Pulling Geometries of a Therapeutic Anticalin/CTLA-4 Protein Complex
JournalArticle (Originalarbeit in einer wissenschaftlichen Zeitschrift)
 
ID 4638131
Author(s) Liu, Zhaowei; Moreira, Rodrigo A.; Dujmović, Ana; Liu, Haipei; Yang, Byeongseon; Poma, Adolfo B.; Nash, Michael A.
Author(s) at UniBasel Nash, Michael
Year 2022
Title Mapping Mechanostable Pulling Geometries of a Therapeutic Anticalin/CTLA-4 Protein Complex
Journal Nano Letters
Volume 22
Number 1
Pages / Article-Number 179-187
Keywords Go̅-Martini model; PCA; atomic force microscopy; click chemistry; mechanical anisotropy; protein engineering; single-molecule force spectroscopy
Mesh terms CTLA-4 Antigen; Microscopy, Atomic Force, methods; Molecular Dynamics Simulation; Protein Binding; Proteins, chemistry
Abstract We used single-molecule AFM force spectroscopy (AFM-SMFS) in combination with click chemistry to mechanically dissociate anticalin, a non-antibody protein binding scaffold, from its target (CTLA-4), by pulling from eight different anchor residues. We found that pulling on the anticalin from residue 60 or 87 resulted in significantly higher rupture forces and a decrease in; k; off; by 2-3 orders of magnitude over a force range of 50-200 pN. Five of the six internal anchor points gave rise to complexes significantly more stable than N- or C-terminal anchor points, rupturing at up to 250 pN at loading rates of 0.1-10 nN s; -1; . Anisotropic network modeling and molecular dynamics simulations helped to explain the geometric dependency of mechanostability. These results demonstrate that optimization of attachment residue position on therapeutic binding scaffolds can provide large improvements in binding strength, allowing for mechanical affinity maturation under shear stress without mutation of binding interface residues.
Publisher American Chemical Society
ISSN/ISBN 1530-6984 ; 1530-6992
edoc-URL https://edoc.unibas.ch/92267/
Full Text on edoc Available
Digital Object Identifier DOI 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c03584
PubMed ID http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34918516
Document type (ISI) Journal Article
 
   

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14/05/2024