4.7 Article

Construction of a Stability Landscape of the CH3 Domain of Human IgG1 by Combining Directed Evolution with High Throughput Sequencing

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 423, Issue 3, Pages 397-412

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2012.07.017

Keywords

immunoglobulin fold; mutational tolerance; sequence-stability relationship; yeast surface display; Fc gamma RI binding site

Funding

  1. Christian Doppler Research Association (Christian Doppler Laboratory for Antibody Engineering)
  2. company F-star
  3. Austrian Science Foundation [FWF W1224]
  4. BOKU DOC scholarship
  5. Austrian Genome Research (GEN-AU) Grant Non-coding RNAs [820982]

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One of the most important but still poorly understood issues in protein chemistry is the relationship between sequence and stability of proteins. Here, we present a method for analyzing the influence of each individual residue on the foldability and stability of an entire protein. A randomly mutated library of the crystallizable fragment of human immunoglobulin G class 1 (IgG1-Fc) was expressed on the surface of yeast, followed by heat incubation at 79 degrees C and selection of stable variants that still bound to structurally specific ligands. High throughput sequencing allowed comparison of the mutation rate between the starting and selected library pools, enabling the generation of a stability landscape for the entire CH3 domain of human IgG1 at single residue resolution. Its quality was analyzed with respect to (i) the structure of IgG1-Fc, (ii) evolutionarily conserved positions and (iii) in silico calculations of the energy of unfolding of all variants in comparison with the wild-type protein. In addition, this new experimental approach allowed the assignment of functional epitopes of structurally specific ligands used for selection [Fc gamma-receptor I (CD64) and anti-human CH2 domain antibody] to distinct binding regions in the CH2 domain. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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