4.7 Article

Computational Design To Reduce Conformational Flexibility and Aggregation Rates of an Antibody Fab Fragment

Journal

MOLECULAR PHARMACEUTICS
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 3079-3092

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.8b00186

Keywords

Fab; mutagenesis; aggregation; thermal stability; melting temperature (T-m); global unfolding; molecular dynamics; protein engineering; cooperativity; entropy

Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Centre for Innovative Manufacturing in Emergent Macromolecular Therapies [EP/I033270/1]
  2. EPSRC Future Targeted Healthcare Manufacturing Hub [EP/P006485/1]
  3. EPSRC [EP/I033270/1, EP/N025105/1, EP/P006485/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/P006485/1, EP/N025105/1, EP/I033270/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Computationally guided semirational design has significant potential for improving the aggregation kinetics of I protein biopharmaceuticals. While improvement in the global conformational stability can stabilize proteins to aggregation under some conditions, previous studies suggest that such an approach is limited, because thermal transition temperatures (T-m) and the fraction of protein unfolded (f(T)) tend to only correlate with aggregation kinetics where the protein is incubated at temperatures approaching the T-m. This is because under these conditions, aggregation from globally unfolded protein becomes dominant. However, under native conditions, the aggregation kinetics are presumed to be dependent on local structural fluctuations or partial unfolding of the native state, which reveal regions of high propensity to form protein-protein interactions that lead to aggregation. In this work, we have targeted the design of stabilizing mutations to regions of the A33 Fab surface structure, which were predicted to be more flexible. This Fab already has high global stability, and global unfolding is not the main cause of aggregation under most conditions. Therefore, the aim was to reduce the conformational flexibility and entropy of the native protein at various locations and thus identify which of those regions has the greatest influence on the aggregation kinetics. Highly dynamic regions of structure were identified through both molecular dynamics simulation and B-factor analysis of related X-ray crystal structures. The most flexible residues were mutated into more stable variants, as predicted by Rosetta, which evaluates the Delta Delta G(ND) for each potential point mutation. Additional destabilizing variants were prepared as controls to evaluate the prediction accuracy and also to assess the general influence of conformational stability on aggregation kinetics. The thermal conformational stability, and aggregation rates of 18 variants at 65 degrees C, were each examined at pH 4, 200 mM ionic strength, under which conditions the initial wild-type protein was < 5% unfolded. Variants with decreased T-m values led to more rapid aggregation due to an increase in the fraction of protein unfolded under the conditions studied. As expected, no significant improvements were observed in the global conformational stability as measured by T-m. However, 6 of the 12 stable variants led to an increase in the cooperativity of unfolding, consistent with lower conformational flexibility and entropy in the native ensemble. Three of these had 5-11% lower aggregation rates, and their structural clustering indicated that the local dynamics of the C-terminus of the heavy chain had a role in influencing the aggregation rate.

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