Effective binding to protein antigens by antibodies from antibody libraries designed with enhanced protein recognition propensities

Jhih Wei Jian, Hong Sen Chen, Yi Kai Chiu, Hung Pin Peng, Chao Ping Tung, Ing Chien Chen, Chung Ming Yu, Yueh Liang Tsou, Wei Ying Kuo, Hung Ju Hsu, An Suei Yang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Antibodies provide immune protection by recognizing antigens of diverse chemical properties, but elucidating the amino acid sequence-function relationships underlying the specificity and affinity of antibody-antigen interactions remains challenging. We designed and constructed phage-displayed synthetic antibody libraries with enriched protein antigen-recognition propensities calculated with machine learning predictors, which indicated that the designed single-chain variable fragment variants were encoded with enhanced distributions of complementarity-determining region (CDR) hot spot residues with high protein antigen recognition propensities in comparison with those in the human antibody germline sequences. Antibodies derived directly from the synthetic antibody libraries, without affinity maturation cycles comparable to those in in vivo immune systems, bound to the corresponding protein antigen through diverse conformational or linear epitopes with specificity and affinity comparable to those of the affinity-matured antibodies from in vivo immune systems. The results indicated that more densely populated CDR hot spot residues were sustainable by the antibody structural frameworks and could be accompanied by enhanced functionalities in recognizing protein antigens. Our study results suggest that synthetic antibody libraries, which are not limited by the sequences found in antibodies in nature, could be designed with the guidance of the computational machine learning algorithms that are programmed to predict interaction propensities to molecules of diverse chemical properties, leading to antibodies with optimal characteristics pertinent to their medical applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)373-387
Number of pages15
JournalmAbs
Volume11
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 17 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • affinity maturation
  • anti-HER2 antibodies
  • antibody engineering
  • antibody-antigen affinity prediction
  • hot spot residues for antibody-protein interactions
  • synthetic antibody library

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Immunology and Allergy
  • Immunology

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