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Structural Guided Scaffold Phage Display Libraries as a Source of Bio-Therapeutics
Author(s) -
Y. K. Stella Man,
Danielle DiCara,
Nicole Chan,
Sandrine Vessillier,
Stephen J. Mather,
Michelle L. Rowe,
Mark J. Howard,
John F. Marshall,
Ahuva Nissim
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0070452
Subject(s) - phage display , ligand (biochemistry) , recombinant dna , scaffold , helix (gastropod) , chemistry , cell adhesion , peptide library , solid phase synthesis , cell , amino acid , computational biology , integrin , biophysics , peptide sequence , combinatorial chemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , biology , receptor , peptide , gene , medicine , ecology , snail , biomedical engineering
We have developed a structurally-guided scaffold phage display strategy for identification of ligand mimetic bio-therapeutics. As a proof of concept we used the ligand of integrin αvβ6, a tumour cell surface receptor and a major new target for imaging and therapy of many types of solid cancer. NMR structure analysis showed that RGD-helix structures are optimal for αvβ6 ligand-interaction, so we designed novel algorithms to generate human single chain fragment variable (scFv) libraries with synthetic V H -CDR3 encoding RGD-helix hairpins with helices of differing pitch, length and amino acid composition. Study of the lead scFv clones D25scFv and D34scFv and their corresponding V H -CDR3 derived peptides, D25p and D34p, demonstrated: specific binding to recombinant and cellular αvβ6; inhibition of αvβ6-dependent cell and ligand adhesion, αvβ6-dependent cell internalisation; and selective retention by αvβ6-expressing, but not αvβ6-negative, human xenografts. NMR analysis established that both the D25p and D34p retained RGD-helix structures confirming the success of the algorithm. In conclusion, scFv libraries can be engineered based on ligand structural motifs to increase the likelihood of developing powerful bio-therapeutics.

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