Removal of a Conserved Disulfide Bond Does Not Compromise Mechanical Stability of a VHH Antibody Complex
Author(s) -
Haipei Liu,
Valentin Schittny,
Michael A. Nash
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
nano letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.853
H-Index - 488
eISSN - 1530-6992
pISSN - 1530-6984
DOI - 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b02062
Subject(s) - chemistry , single domain antibody , cysteine , biophysics , mutagenesis , alanine , molecular dynamics , antibody , biochemistry , mutation , biology , enzyme , amino acid , computational chemistry , gene , immunology
Single-domain VHH antibodies are promising reagents for medical therapy. A conserved disulfide bond within the VHH framework region is known to be critical for thermal stability, however, no prior studies have investigated its influence on the stability of VHH antibody-antigen complexes under mechanical load. Here, we used single-molecule force spectroscopy to test the influence of a VHH domain's conserved disulfide bond on the mechanical strength of the interaction with its antigen mCherry. We found that although removal of the disulfide bond through cysteine-to-alanine mutagenesis significantly lowered VHH domain denaturation temperature, it had no significant impact on the mechanical strength of the VHH:mCherry interaction with complex rupture occurring at ∼60 pN at 10 3 -10 4 pN/sec regardless of disulfide bond state. These results demonstrate that mechanostable binding interactions can be built on molecular scaffolds that may be thermodynamically compromised at equilibrium.
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