4.8 Article

Using Covalent Dimers of Human Carbonic Anhydrase II To Model Bivalency in Immunoglobulins

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 133, Issue 30, Pages 11701-11715

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja2038084

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM030367, NRSA-GM076971]
  2. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard

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This paper describes the development of a new bivalent system comprising synthetic dimers of carbonic anhydrase linked chemically through thiol groups of cysteine residues introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. These compounds serve as models with which to study the interaction of bivalent proteins with ligands presented at the surface of mixed self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Monovalent carbonic anhydrase (CA) binds to benzenesulfonamide ligands presented on the surface of the SAM with K-d(surf) = 89 nM. The synthetic bivalent proteins inspired by the structure of immunoglobulins-bind bivalently to the sulfonamide-functionalized SAMs with low nanomolar avidities (K-d(avidity,surf) = 1 - 3 nM); this difference represents a similar to 50-fold enhancement of bivalent over monovalent association. The paper describes dimers of CA having (i) different lengths of the covalent linker that joined the two proteins and (ii) different points of attachment of the linker to the protein (either near the active site (C133) or distal to the active site (C185)). Comparison of the thermodynamics of their interactions with SAMs presenting arylsulfonamide groups demonstrated that varying the length of the linker between the molecules of CA had virtually no effect on the rate of association, or on the avidity of these dimers with ligand-presenting surfaces. Varying the point of attachment of the linker between monomeric CA's also had almost no effect on the avidity of the dimers, although changing the point of attachment affected the rates of binding and unbinding. These observations indicate that the avidities of these bivalent proteins, and by inference the avidities of structurally similar bivalent proteins such as IgG, are unexpectedly insensitive to the structure of the linker connecting them.

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