4.6 Article

The interplay of protein engineering and glycoengineering to fine-tune antibody glycosylation and its impact on effector functions

期刊

BIOTECHNOLOGY AND BIOENGINEERING
卷 119, 期 1, 页码 102-117

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bit.27953

关键词

Antibody glycosylation; Core fucose; Effector functions; Fc mutation; Sialylation linkage

资金

  1. USA National Science Foundation [CBET-1264802, CBET-1512265]

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This study investigates the impact of N-glycan pattern on the quality and function of IgG antibodies, and explores the methods of glycoengineering and protein engineering to modify these effects. The results show that glycoengineering and protein engineering can alter the glycan composition and structure of antibodies, thereby affecting their effector functions such as cytotoxicity and cellular adhesion. Additionally, the study reveals that different glycan compositions and structures have different effects on the cytotoxicity and cellular adhesion of antibodies.
The N-glycan pattern of an IgG antibody, attached at a conserved site within the fragment crystallizable (Fc) region, is a critical antibody quality attribute whose structural variability can also impact antibody function. For tailoring the Fc glycoprofile, glycoengineering in cell lines as well as Fc amino acid mutations have been applied. Multiple glycoengineered Chinese hamster ovary cell lines were generated, including defucosylated (FUT8KO), alpha-2,6-sialylated (ST6KI), and defucosylated alpha-2,6-sialylated (FUT8KOST6KI), expressing either a wild-type anti-CD20 IgG (WT) or phenylalanine to alanine (F241A) mutant. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry characterization of antibody N-glycans revealed that the F241A mutation significantly increased galactosylation and sialylation content and glycan branching. Furthermore, overexpression of recombinant human alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase resulted in a predominance of alpha-2,6-sialylation rather than alpha-2,3-sialylation for both WT and heavily sialylated F241A antibody N-glycans. Interestingly, knocking out alpha-1,6-fucosyltransferase (FUT8KO), which removed core fucose, lowered the content of N-glycans with terminal Gal and increased levels of terminal GlcNAc and Man5 groups on WT antibody. Further complement-dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) analysis revealed that, regardless of the production cells, WT antibody samples have higher cytotoxic CDC activity with more exposed Gal residues compared to their individual F241A mutants. However, the FUT8KO WT antibody, with a large fraction of bi-GlcNAc structures (G0), displayed the lowest CDC activity of all WT antibody samples. Furthermore, for the F241A mutants, a higher CDC activity was observed for alpha-2,6- compared to alpha-2,3-sialylation. Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) analysis revealed that the defucosylated WT and F241A mutants showed enhanced in vitro ADCC performance compared to their fucosylated counterparts, with the defucosylated WT antibodies displaying the highest overall ADCC activity, regardless of sialic acid substitution. Moreover, the Fc gamma RIIIA receptor binding by antibodies did not always correspond directly with ADCC result. This study demonstrates that glycoengineering and protein engineering can both promote and inhibit antibody effector functions and represent practical approaches for varying glycan composition and functionalities during antibody development.

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