Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology (Jul 2024)

Development of a synthetic library of humanized nanobodies for targeted IL-6 inhibition

  • Lei Wang,
  • Jiayi Dong,
  • Chenlu Wu,
  • Chenyue Yan,
  • Chong Bi,
  • Chengnan Xu,
  • Yiling Wu,
  • Wenyun Zheng,
  • Xingyuan Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2024.1440150
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a cytokine that can bind to IL-6 receptor and induce pleiotropic effects. It serves as a critical biomarker, involved in inflammation amplification, tumor progression, and many other disease developments. Nanobodies, featuring small structure and high affinity, are a powerful and versatile tool in medical diagnostics and therapeutics. Here, based on a scaffold optimized for humanization and stability, we developed a synthetic phage display library that rapidly generated high-affinity and humanized nanobodies, negating the need for animal immunization. Using enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) as a benchmark, we demonstrated that the library produced humanized nanobodies with high function and great intracellular stability. The library was then subjected to screening against IL-6. We identified a standout nanobody, NbL3, which exhibited high affinity (22.16 nM) and stability and significantly inhibited IL-6-enhanced migration on the human breast cancer cell MCF-7 at a relatively low concentration. NbL3’s strong blocking activity provides a promising therapeutic alternative for the IL-6-targeted intervention strategy, underscoring the broader potential of our synthetic library as a versatile platform for the development of humanized nanobodies against multiple antigens.

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