mAbs (Dec 2024)

Structure- and machine learning-guided engineering demonstrate that a non-canonical disulfide in an anti-PD-1 rabbit antibody does not impede antibody developability

  • Wei-Ching Liang,
  • Hongkang Xi,
  • Dawei Sun,
  • Luigi D’Ascenzo,
  • Jonathan Zarzar,
  • Nicole Stephens,
  • Ryan Cook,
  • Yinyin Li,
  • Zhengmao Ye,
  • Marissa Matsumoto,
  • Jian Payandeh,
  • Matthieu Masureel,
  • Yan Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420862.2024.2309685
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1

Abstract

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ABSTRACTRabbits produce robust antibody responses and have unique features in their antibody repertoire that make them an attractive alternative to rodents for in vivo discovery. However, the frequent occurrence of a non-canonical disulfide bond between complementarity-determining region (CDR) H1 (C35a) and CDRH2 (C50) is often seen as a liability for therapeutic antibody development, despite limited reports of its effect on antibody binding, function, and stability. Here, we describe the discovery and humanization of a human-mouse cross-reactive anti-programmed cell death (PD-1) monoclonal rabbit antibody, termed h1340.CC, which possesses this non-canonical disulfide bond. Initial removal of the non-canonical disulfide resulted in a loss of PD-1 affinity and cross-reactivity, which led us to explore protein engineering approaches to recover these. First, guided by the sequence of a related clone and the crystal structure of h1340.CC in complex with PD-1, we generated variant h1340.SA.LV with a potency and cross-reactivity similar to h1340.CC, but only partially recovered affinity. Side-by-side developability assessment of both h1340.CC and h1340.SA.LV indicate that they possess similar, favorable properties. Next, and prompted by recent developments in machine learning (ML)-guided protein engineering, we used an unbiased ML- and structure-guided approach to rapidly and efficiently generate a different variant with recovered affinity. Our case study thus indicates that, while the non-canonical inter-CDR disulfide bond found in rabbit antibodies does not necessarily constitute an obstacle to therapeutic antibody development, combining structure- and ML-guided approaches can provide a fast and efficient way to improve antibody properties and remove potential liabilities.

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