Computational Design of an Allosteric Antibody Switch by Deletion and Rescue of a Complex Structural Constellation

ACS Cent Sci. 2020 Mar 25;6(3):390-403. doi: 10.1021/acscentsci.9b01065. Epub 2020 Mar 11.

Abstract

Therapeutic monoclonal antibodies have transformed medicine, especially with regards to treating cancers and disorders of the immune system. More than 50 antibody-derived drugs have already reached the clinic, the majority of which target cytokines or cell-surface receptors. Unfortunately, many of these targets have pleiotropic functions: they serve multiple different roles, and often not all of these roles are disease-related. This can be problematic because antibodies act throughout the body, and systemic neutralization of such targets can lead to safety concerns. To address this, we have developed a strategy whereby an antibody's ability to recognize its antigen is modulated by a second layer of control, relying on addition of an exogenous small molecule. In previous studies, we began to explore this idea by introducing a deactivating tryptophan-to-glycine mutation in the domain-domain interface of a single-chain variable fragment (scFv), and then restoring activity by adding back indole to fit the designed cavity. Here, we now describe a novel computational strategy for enumerating larger cavities that can be formed by simultaneously introducing multiple adjacent large-to-small mutations; we then carry out a complementary virtual screen to identify druglike compounds to match each candidate cavity. We first demonstrate the utility of this strategy in a fluorescein-binding single-chain variable fragment (scFv) and experimentally characterize a triple mutant with reduced antigen-binding (Rip-3) that can be rescued using a complementary ligand (Stitch-3). Because our design is built upon conserved residues in the antibody framework, we then show that the same mutation/ligand pair can also be used to modulate antigen-binding in an scFv build from a completely unrelated framework. This set of residues is present in many therapeutic antibodies as well, suggesting that this mutation/ligand pair may serve as a general starting point for introducing ligand-dependence into many clinically relevant antibodies.