Scientific Reports (Aug 2024)
Rational design of environmentally responsive antibodies with pH-sensing synthetic amino acids
Abstract
Abstract Antibodies are widely used as therapeutic agents to tackle various diseases. In the present study, to enhance their clinical values, we rationally designed pH-responsivity by exploiting the idiosyncratic protonation/deprotonation profiles of non-natural amino acids. 3-Nitro-l-tyrosine, 3-cyano-l-tyrosine, and 3, 5-halogenated-l-tyrosine, each with near neutral pKa, were thus incorporated into Fab fragments in place of tyrosines and other residues in the variable regions. Cell-based assays showed that these modifications achieved up to 140-fold tighter binding to antigens and several-fold tighter cytotoxicity to antigen-expressing cell at pH 6.0 than pH 7.4. The pH-dependent binding effect was retained in full-length antibodies. In silico structural analyses revealed electrostatic repulsion at neutral pH between antigens and antibodies or inside the antibody as the underlying mechanisms of the acid preference, and this finding increases the designability of pH-dependent antigen binding. The development of antibodies responsive to the microenvironments of diseased tissues will allow more disease-related antigens to be targeted in treatments, because of the reduced cross-reactivity toward healthy tissues.