4.7 Article

Hinge disulfides in human IgG2 CD40 antibodies modulate receptor signaling by regulation of conformation and flexibility

Journal

SCIENCE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 73, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.abm3723

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Funding

  1. CRUK [DRCDDRPGM-Apr2020\100005, C1477/A10834, C1477/A20537, C34999/A18087, C328/A25139]
  2. EU [602262-2]
  3. University of Southampton
  4. HECBioSim consortium (EPSRC grant) [EP/R029407/1]
  5. Cancer Sciences
  6. University of Hamburg
  7. Cluster of Excellence The Hamburg Centre for Ultrafast Imagingof the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG EXC1074]
  8. CRUK
  9. School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton
  10. Faculty of Medicine Careertrack award
  11. Centre for Cancer Immunology TalentFund
  12. International Max Planck Research School for Ultrafast Imaging and Structural Dynamics (UFAST)
  13. Cluster of Excellence CUI: Advanced Imaging of Matter [DFG EXC 2056]

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Hinge disulfide orientation in the IgG2 isotype affects its agonistic activity by modulating receptor signaling. Crystallographic structures reveal a disulfide crossover between F(ab) arms in agonistic forms, independent of epitope. The least flexible variants induce the highest levels of receptor agonism.
Antibodies protect from infection, underpin successful vaccines and elicit therapeutic responses in otherwise untreatable cancers and autoimmune conditions. The human IgG2 isotype displays a unique capacity to undergo disulfide shuffling in the hinge region, leading to modulation of its ability to drive target receptor signaling (agonism) in a variety of important immune receptors, through hitherto unexplained molecular mechanisms. To address the underlying process and reveal how hinge disulfide orientation affects agonistic activity, we generated a series of cysteine to serine exchange variants in the hinge region of the clinically relevant monoclonal antibody ChiLob7/4, directed against the key immune receptor CD40. We report how agonistic activity varies with disulfide pattern and is afforded by the presence of a disulfide crossover between F(ab) arms in the agonistic forms, independently of epitope, as observed in the determined crystallographic structures. This structural switch affects directly on antibody conformation and flexibility. Small-angle x-ray scattering and ensemble modeling demonstrated that the least flexible variants adopt the fewest conformations and evoke the highest levels of receptor agonism. This covalent change may be amenable for broad implementation to modulate receptor signaling in an epitope-independent manner in future therapeutics.

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