Scientific Reports (Feb 2021)

Defining the epitope of a blood–brain barrier crossing single domain antibody specific for the type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor

  • Joey Sheff,
  • Ping Wang,
  • Ping Xu,
  • Melanie Arbour,
  • Luke Masson,
  • Henk van Faassen,
  • Greg Hussack,
  • Kristin Kemmerich,
  • Eric Brunette,
  • Danica Stanimirovic,
  • Jennifer J. Hill,
  • John Kelly,
  • Feng Ni

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-83198-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Ligand-activated signaling through the type 1 insulin-like growth factor receptor (IGF1R) is implicated in many physiological processes ranging from normal human growth to cancer proliferation and metastasis. IGF1R has also emerged as a target for receptor-mediated transcytosis, a transport phenomenon that can be exploited to shuttle biotherapeutics across the blood–brain barrier (BBB). We employed differential hydrogen–deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX-MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) to characterize the interactions of the IGF1R ectodomain with a recently discovered BBB-crossing single-domain antibody (sdAb), VHH-IR5, in comparison with IGF-1 binding. HDX-MS confirmed that IGF-1 induced global conformational shifts in the L1/FnIII-1/-2 domains and α-CT helix of IGF1R. In contrast, the VHH-IR5 sdAb-mediated changes in conformational dynamics were limited to the α-CT helix and its immediate vicinity (L1 domain). High-resolution NMR spectroscopy titration data and linear peptide scanning demonstrated that VHH-IR5 has high-affinity binding interactions with a peptide sequence around the C-terminal region of the α-CT helix. Taken together, these results define a core linear epitope for VHH-IR5 within the α-CT helix, overlapping the IGF-1 binding site, and suggest a potential role for the α-CT helix in sdAb-mediated transcytosis.