Scientific Reports (Jun 2024)

Use of phase plate cryo-EM reveals conformation diversity of therapeutic IgG with 50 kDa Fab fragment resolved below 6 Å

  • Hsin-Hung Lin,
  • Chun-Hsiung Wang,
  • Shih-Hsin Huang,
  • Sung-Yao Lin,
  • Takayuki Kato,
  • Keiichi Namba,
  • Naoki Hosogi,
  • Chihong Song,
  • Kazuyoshi Murata,
  • Ching-Hsuan Yen,
  • Tsui-Ling Hsu,
  • Chi-Huey Wong,
  • Yi-Min Wu,
  • I.-Ping Tu,
  • Wei-Hau Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-62045-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract While cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is fruitfully used for harvesting high-resolution structures of sizable macromolecules, its application to small or flexible proteins composed of small domains like immunoglobulin (IgG) remain challenging. Here, we applied single particle cryo-EM to Rituximab, a therapeutic IgG mediating anti-tumor toxicity, to explore its solution conformations. We found Rituximab molecules exhibited aggregates in cryo-EM specimens contrary to its solution behavior, and utilized a non-ionic detergent to successfully disperse them as isolated particles amenable to single particle analysis. As the detergent adversely reduced the protein-to-solvent contrast, we employed phase plate contrast to mitigate the impaired protein visibility. Assisted by phase plate imaging, we obtained a canonical three-arm IgG structure with other structures displaying variable arm densities co-existing in solution, affirming high flexibility of arm-connecting linkers. Furthermore, we showed phase plate imaging enables reliable structure determination of Fab to sub-nanometer resolution from ab initio, yielding a characteristic two-lobe structure that could be unambiguously docked with crystal structure. Our findings revealed conformation diversity of IgG and demonstrated phase plate was viable for cryo-EM analysis of small proteins without symmetry. This work helps extend cryo-EM boundaries, providing a valuable imaging and structural analysis framework for macromolecules with similar challenging features.