4.6 Article

Structural basis for antigen recognition by methylated lysine-specific antibodies

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.015996

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Platform Project for Supporting Drug Discovery and Life Science Research (Basis for Supporting Innovative Drug Discovery and Life Science Research [BINDS]) from Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED) [JP19am0101070]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16H02420, 16H06693]
  3. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development [JP18am0101094j, JP18dm0107064h, JP18mk0101081h, JP18fm0208030h, JP18fk0108073h, JP18ak0101100h, JP 19am0401010h0001]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H06693] Funding Source: KAKEN

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This study successfully created antibodies recognizing specific methylated substrates using a unique method; through structural and biophysical analyses, molecular details of antigen recognition by the antibodies were revealed; computational simulations replicated biophysical data, capturing antibodies of varying affinity and specificity.
Proteins are modulated by a variety of posttranslational modifications including methylation. Despite its importance, the majority of protein methylation modifications discovered by mass spectrometric analyses are functionally uncharacterized, partly owing to the difficulty in obtaining reliable methylsite-specific antibodies. To elucidate how functional methylsite-specific antibodies recognize the antigens and lead to the development of a novel method to create such antibodies, we use an immunized library paired with phage display to create rabbit monoclonal antibodies recognizing trimethylated Lys260 of MAP3K2 as a representative substrate. We isolated several methylsite-specific antibodies that contained unique complementarity determining region sequence. We characterized the mode of antigen recognition by each of these antibodies using structural and biophysical analyses, revealing the molecular details, such as binding affinity toward methylated/nonmethylated antigens and structural motif that is responsible for recognition of the methylated lysine residue, by which each antibody recognized the target antigen. In addition, the comparison with the results of Western blotting analysis suggests a critical antigen recognition mode to generate cross-reactivity to protein and peptide antigen of the antibodies. Computational simulations effectively recapitulated our biophysical data, capturing the antibodies of differing affinity and specificity. Our exhaustive characterization provides molecular architectures of functional methylsite-specific antibodies and thus should contribute to the development of a general method to generate functional methylsite-specific antibodies by de novo design.

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