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CASE STUDY Structural Characterization of an Antibody in Complex with a Serine Protease Tina Yeh, PhD Lead Scientist - Accelrys Structural stabilization due to monoclonal antibody binding influences the protease activity of human kallikrein-3 • Accurate protein-protein complex structure prediction and refinement with ZDOCK and RDOCK protocols Since the advent of monoclonal antibody (mAb) technologies in recent years, • CHARMm based Calculate Mutation Energy protocol predicts antibody mutants with enhanced stability of each chain contains three regions of sequence hypervariability, called the CDRs numerous therapeutic mAbs have been developed into beneficial agents for the treatment of a variety of human diseases. Antibodies are multi-domain structures typically composed of two light chains and two heavy chains. The variable domain (complementarity-determining regions). These versatile hypervariable regions are responsible for the antigen binding affinity and specificity. Proteases are widely distributed in nature Asp-Ser catalytic triad of serine proteases. and various deregulated protease activities PSA is a well known biomarker for prostate are frequently implicated in pathological cancer, and implicated in prostate cancer conditions such as cancer, cardiovascular development and progression. However and inflammatory disorders. The challenge the exact role of its protease activity in in developing an inhibitor for a particular prostate cancer is still unknown. Recently the protease is to achieve specificity, since crystal structure of kallikrein-3 in complex members of the same protease family with an activating antibody has been often have largely conserved binding sites. solved (Menez et al, 2008), which affords The highly specific nature of antibody- insight into the structural determinants antigen recognition makes it desirable of recognition and sheds light on the to consider designing antibodies as nature of antibody-PSA interactions. potential modifiers of protease functions. Prostate-specific Antigen (PSA), also known as kallikrein-3, is an androgen-regulated serine protease expressed in prostate tissue and shares the characteristic His- accelrys.com 1 CASE STUDY: Discovery STudio Method The antibody 8G8F5 recognizes the binding epitope on the Protein docking studies were performed in Discovery Studio using the Dock Proteins protocols. The ZDOCK protocol performs the initial global, systematic search of the orientations of the two protein partners. Typically the larger protein (the receptor protein) is kept fixed while moving the smaller protein (the ligand protein) around the receptor protein. ZDOCK uses a grid-based rigidbody docking search in six dimensions utilizing the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) technique for efficiency. The rotational search sampling grid can use a 15 degree grid which samples a total of 3600 docked poses, or a 6 degree grid which samples a total antigen PSA located at five discontinuous surface loop segments including residues: 90-95, 98-101, 124-129, 175-179, 232-240 (see Figure 2). The antibody does not reach into the PSA active site; rather it binds at the peripheral side of the active site cleft. The heavy chain CDR loops contribute more to the binding interaction than do the light chain CDR loops. All 3 heavy chain CDR loop residues H:27-33, H:52-58, H:96-100C are in the central core region of the binding interface whereas the light chain CDR1 loop residues L:27D-32 and CDR3 loop residues L:91-96 residues are involved in the peripheral binding area. of 54,000 poses for more accurate results. The ZDOCK internal scoring algorithm is based on a pairwise shape complementarity function (PSC) and optionally delsolvation and electrostatic terms can also be included. As part of the ZDOCK protocol, the ZRANK function is used to rerank the docked poses. ZRANK is an optimized energy scoring function based on weighted energy terms of van der Waals, electrostatics, and desolvation. The RDOCK protocol can be used subsequently for further refinement of the docked poses, using a CHARMm-based energy minimization scheme for the optimization of intermolecular interactions. PSA and the antibody Fab 8G8F5 structures are taken from PDB 2ZCH. The ZDOCK protocol with a 6 degree rotational sampling grid was used and several antibody CDR loop residues were specified for filtering poses. Docked poses are ranked with ZRANK and further optimized with RDOCK. The best pose is very similar to the crystal structure of 2ZCH (Figure 1), demonstrating that the ZRANK scoring function and RDOCK refinement successfully discriminate the near native protein complex structure. Figure 2. Two views of the PSA-antibody binding interface are shown as ribbon diagrams. Antibody heavy chain (green) and light chain (orange). The antigenic determinants on PSA include five discontinuous segments: three loops (purple) [90-95] [98-101] [175-179], one loop [124-129] (yellow) and the C-terminal helical region [232-240] (yellow). The PSA catalytic triad residues H57 D102 S195 are labeled. As shown in the figure above, the three PSA loops [90-95] [98-101] [175-179] are all in close spatial proximity and interact with all three of the antibody’s heavy chain CDRs. The so-called classic “Kallikrein loop” in PSA includes an 11 amino acids insertion 95A-95K (relative to standard chymotrypsin numbering). The kallikrein loop in PSA is located between loop [90-95] and loop [98-101], at the border of the PSA active site cleft. PSA:His91 forms a hydrogen bond with antibody heavy chain CDR3 residue H:Tyr97, and PSA:Pro92 forms a hydrogen bond with heavy chain CDR2 residue H:Ser54. PSA:Leu93 is located in a hydrophobic pocket with favorable van der Waals interaction with surrounding antibody heavy chain CDR residues including H:Tyr33, H:Ala52, H:Pro52A, and H:Tyr97. Figure 1. Protein ribbon diagram of the best docking prediction of the PSAantibody complex superimposed on the crystal structure from PDB 2ZCH. Antibody light chain (orange), heavy chain (green). accelrys.com 2 CASE STUDY: Discovery STudio The PSA:Asp98 side chain can form hydrogen bonds with antibody residue H:Thr28 or H:Thr31. At one edge of the binding interface the PSA loop residue PSA:Lys175 also forms a hydrogen bond with antibody residue H:Thr28. Another PSA lysine residue PSA:Lys178 is within hydrogen bond distance with antibody residues H:Asp96 and H:Tyr97. The last segment PSA:232-240 is part of the PSA C-terminal helix and interacts with the CDR loops from both the antibody light chain and the heavy chain. At the edge of the binding interface PSA:Lys236 can form a hydrogen bond with antibody residue L:Ser91 and a salt bridge interaction with H:Glu100C. PSA:Arg235 forms a hydrogen bond with antibody residue L:Asp28. With the solvent surface displayed on PSA, it’s easy to visualize the different areas where each antibody CDR loop residue interacts with PSA (see Figure 3). The heavy chain CDR3 loop occupies the core region of the binding interface. The side chain of the two lysine residues on PSA, Lys178 and Lys236, delineate a concave shaped pocket on PSA that the heavy chain CDR3 loop fits into. Another pair of lysine residues on PSA, Lys178 and Lys175, Figure 3. Four lysine residues involved in the binding interface. PSA is represented as a surface with the four lysine residues (Blue) labeled. Ribbon diagram for the three heavy chain CDR loops displayed in yellow, with CDR3 loop in the center of the screen (between Lys236 and Lys178). Ribbon diagram for the light chain CDR1 and CDR3 loops displayed in red. delineate another pocket that the heavy chain CDR1 loop fits into. At the edge of the binding interface, PSA residue Lys239 interacts favorably with antibody light chain CDR1 loop residue L:Phe27D. Several hydrophobic and aromatic amino acids from the antibody heavy chain CDR3 loop and from PSA contribute to the stabilizing hydrophobic core and favorable π interactions in the binding interface. These include residues: H:Tyr32, H:Tyr33, H:Tyr58, H:Tyr97, H:Phe99, and PSA:Leu93, PSA:His91, PSA:His101, PSA:Phe179, PSA:Tyr234, PSA:Trp237. Since PSA, also known as kallikrein-3, has a very long kallikrein loop including the 11 residue insertion (from Met95A to Pro95K), the flexible loop conformation could block the access to the PSA active site nearby. Based on the allosteric regulation (activation) mechanism, it has been proposed (Menez et al, 2008) that, the antibody interacts with the two PSA surface loops [90-95] and [98-101] on either side of the kallikrein loop, thereby effectively stabilizing the kallikrein loop conformation and keeping the substrate-binding cleft accessible. This could explain the enhanced PSA enzyme activity upon antibody binding. accelrys.com We have performed computational scanning mutagenesis analysis using the CHARMm-based Calculate Mutation Energy protocols in Discovery Studio, to evaluate the effect of singlepoint mutations on the stability and binding affinity of the PSA-antibody complex. For the Mutation Energy (Stability) calculation, the energy effect of each mutation is calculated as the difference between the folding free energy of the mutated structure and the wild type structure. The method includes the Generalized Born implicit solvent model in CHARMm and the energy functional contains empirically scaled contributions of van der Waals and electrostatic terms, a side chain entropy term and a non-polar solvation energy term. The results have identified several mutations on the antibody heavy chain that exhibit a stabilizing effect. These include residue H:Ser54 on the heavy chain CDR2 loop mutated to hydrophobic amino acids TRP, TYR, PHE, ILE, and LEU, all stabilizing mutations, with favorable contribution from the van der Waals energy term. Residue H:Thr31 on the heavy chain CDR1 loop mutated to MET, ILE, PHE, and VAL are also stabilizing mutations. 3 CASE STUDY: Discovery Studio Conclusion References In this case study we demonstrate the structural analysis 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. of the binding interface of a PSA-antibody complex using the tools and methods in Discovery Studio. Protein docking studies using ZDOCK and RDOCK refinement has successfully predicted the near native structure for the PSA-antibody complex as determined by X-ray crystallography. All three CDR loops of the antibody heavy chain contribute the major part of the interaction with PSA, with the CDR3 loop at the core of the binding interface. The antibody light chain CDR1 and CDR3 loops provide interaction at the edge Menez et al, “Crystal Structure of a Ternary Complex between Human Prostate-specific Antigen, Its Substrate Acyl Intermediate and an Activating Antibody,” J. Mol. Biol. 2008, 376, 1021-1033. LeBeau et al, “Prostate-specific antigen: an overlooked candidate for targeted treatment and selective imaging of prostate cancer,” Biol. Chem. 2010, 391, 333-343 Wu et al, “Structural insight into distinct mechanisms of protease inhibition by antibodies,” PNAS 2007, 104(50), 19784-19789 Hedstrom L. “Serine Protease Mechanism and Specificity,” Chem. Rev. 2002, 102, 4501-4523. Pierce B., Weng Z. “A Combination of Rescoring and Refinement Significantly Improves Protein Docking Performance,” Proteins 2008, 72, 270-279. of the binding interface. The antibody-PSA binding affinity is achieved through the shape complementarity between the antibody paratope and the epitope on PSA consisting of five discontinuous segments, the extensive hydrogen bonds, and favorable van der Waals and hydrophobic interactions. The computational scanning mutagenesis study has identified a few putative mutations on the antibody heavy chain that could potentially enhance the stability of the complex. To learn more about Discovery Studio by Accelrys, go to accelrys.com/discovery-studio accelrys.com © 2011 Accelrys Software Inc. All brands or product names may be trademarks of their respective holders. CS-3053-0112 4