4.5 Article

Mapping protein interactions by combining antibody affinity maturation and mass spectrometry

Journal

ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 417, Issue 1, Pages 25-35

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2011.05.005

Keywords

Antibody phage display; Affinity maturation; Immunoprecipitation; Mass spectrometry; Protein-protein interaction networks

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust
  2. Genome Canada through the Ontario Genomics Institute
  3. Ontario Research Fund Research Excellence program
  4. National Institutes of Health [GM082288-09A1, EY016094-01A1]

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Mapping protein interactions by immunoprecipitation is limited by the availability of antibodies recognizing available native epitopes within protein complexes with sufficient affinity. Here we demonstrate a scalable approach for generation of such antibodies using phage display and affinity maturation. We combined antibody variable heavy (V-H) genes from target-specific clones (recognizing Src homology 2 (SH2) domains of LYN, VAV1, NCK1, ZAP70, PTPN11, CRK, LCK, and SHC1) with a repertoire of 10(8) to 10(9) new variable light (V-L) genes. Improved binders were isolated by stringent selections from these new chain-shuffled libraries. We also developed a predictive 96-well immunocapture screen and found that only 12% of antibodies had sufficient affinity/epitope availability to capture endogenous target from lysates. Using antibodies of different affinities to the same epitope, we show that affinity improvement was a key determinant for success and identified a clear affinity threshold value (60 nM for SHC1) that must be breached for success in immunoprecipitation. By combining affinity capture using matured antibodies to SHC1 with mass spectrometry, we identified seven known binding partners and two known SHC1 phosphorylation sites in epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated human breast cancer epithelial cells. These results demonstrate that antibodies capable of immunoprecipitation can be generated by chain shuffling, providing a scalable approach to mapping protein-protein interaction networks. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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