TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping the Energetic Epitope of an Antibody/Interleukin-23 Interaction with Hydrogen/Deuterium Exchange, Fast Photochemical Oxidation of Proteins Mass Spectrometry, and Alanine Shave Mutagenesis
AU - Li, Jing
AU - Wei, Hui
AU - Krystek, Stanley R.
AU - Bond, Derek
AU - Brender, Ty M.
AU - Cohen, Daniel
AU - Feiner, Jena
AU - Hamacher, Nels
AU - Harshman, Johanna
AU - Huang, Richard Y.C.
AU - Julien, Susan H.
AU - Lin, Zheng
AU - Moore, Kristina
AU - Mueller, Luciano
AU - Noriega, Claire
AU - Sejwal, Preeti
AU - Sheppard, Paul
AU - Stevens, Brenda
AU - Chen, Guodong
AU - Tymiak, Adrienne A.
AU - Gross, Michael L.
AU - Schneeweis, Lumelle A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2017/2/21
Y1 - 2017/2/21
N2 - Epitope mapping the specific residues of an antibody/antigen interaction can be used to support mechanistic interpretation, antibody optimization, and epitope novelty assessment. Thus, there is a strong need for mapping methods, particularly integrative ones. Here, we report the identification of an energetic epitope by determining the interfacial hot-spot that dominates the binding affinity for an anti-interleukin-23 (anti-IL-23) antibody by using the complementary approaches of hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS), fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), alanine shave mutagenesis, and binding analytics. Five peptide regions on IL-23 with reduced backbone amide solvent accessibility upon antibody binding were identified by HDX-MS, and five different peptides over the same three regions were identified by FPOP. In addition, FPOP analysis at the residue level reveals potentially key interacting residues. Mutants with 3-5 residues changed to alanine have no measurable differences from wild-type IL-23 except for binding of and signaling blockade by the 7B7 anti-IL-23 antibody. The M5 IL-23 mutant differs from wild-type by five alanine substitutions and represents the dominant energetic epitope of 7B7. M5 shows a dramatic decrease in binding to BMS-986010 (which contains the 7B7 Fab, where Fab is fragment antigen-binding region of an antibody), yet it maintains functional activity, binding to p40 and p19 specific reagents, and maintains biophysical properties similar to wild-type IL-23 (monomeric state, thermal stability, and secondary structural features).
AB - Epitope mapping the specific residues of an antibody/antigen interaction can be used to support mechanistic interpretation, antibody optimization, and epitope novelty assessment. Thus, there is a strong need for mapping methods, particularly integrative ones. Here, we report the identification of an energetic epitope by determining the interfacial hot-spot that dominates the binding affinity for an anti-interleukin-23 (anti-IL-23) antibody by using the complementary approaches of hydrogen/deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS), fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), alanine shave mutagenesis, and binding analytics. Five peptide regions on IL-23 with reduced backbone amide solvent accessibility upon antibody binding were identified by HDX-MS, and five different peptides over the same three regions were identified by FPOP. In addition, FPOP analysis at the residue level reveals potentially key interacting residues. Mutants with 3-5 residues changed to alanine have no measurable differences from wild-type IL-23 except for binding of and signaling blockade by the 7B7 anti-IL-23 antibody. The M5 IL-23 mutant differs from wild-type by five alanine substitutions and represents the dominant energetic epitope of 7B7. M5 shows a dramatic decrease in binding to BMS-986010 (which contains the 7B7 Fab, where Fab is fragment antigen-binding region of an antibody), yet it maintains functional activity, binding to p40 and p19 specific reagents, and maintains biophysical properties similar to wild-type IL-23 (monomeric state, thermal stability, and secondary structural features).
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85025132776&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b03058
DO - 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b03058
M3 - Article
C2 - 28193005
AN - SCOPUS:85025132776
SN - 0003-2700
VL - 89
SP - 2250
EP - 2258
JO - Analytical Chemistry
JF - Analytical Chemistry
IS - 4
ER -