Sand Kine Marita Knudsen, Dalhus Bjørn, Christianson Gregory J, Bern Malin, Foss Stian, Cameron Jason, Sleep Darrell, Bjørås Magnar, Roopenian Derry C, Sandlie Inger, Andersen Jan Terje
From the Centre for Immune Regulation (CIR) and Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, N-0316 Oslo, Norway, CIR and Department of Immunology, Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet and University of Oslo, Norway, N-0424 Oslo, Norway.
the Department for Microbiology, Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet and University of Oslo, Nydalen, N-0424 Oslo, Norway, the Department of Medical Biochemistry, Oslo University Hospital Rikshospitalet and University of Oslo, Nydalen, N-0424 Oslo, Norway.
J Biol Chem. 2014 Jun 13;289(24):17228-39. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M113.522565. Epub 2014 Apr 24.
Albumin is the most abundant protein in blood and plays a pivotal role as a multitransporter of a wide range of molecules such as fatty acids, metabolites, hormones, and toxins. In addition, it binds a variety of drugs. Its role as distributor is supported by its extraordinary serum half-life of 3 weeks. This is related to its size and binding to the cellular receptor FcRn, which rescues albumin from intracellular degradation. Furthermore, the long half-life has fostered a great and increasing interest in utilization of albumin as a carrier of protein therapeutics and chemical drugs. However, to fully understand how FcRn acts as a regulator of albumin homeostasis and to take advantage of the FcRn-albumin interaction in drug design, the interaction interface needs to be dissected. Here, we used a panel of monoclonal antibodies directed towards human FcRn in combination with site-directed mutagenesis and structural modeling to unmask the binding sites for albumin blocking antibodies and albumin on the receptor, which revealed that the interaction is not only strictly pH-dependent, but predominantly hydrophobic in nature. Specifically, we provide mechanistic evidence for a crucial role of a cluster of conserved tryptophan residues that expose a pH-sensitive loop of FcRn, and identify structural differences in proximity to these hot spot residues that explain divergent cross-species binding properties of FcRn. Our findings expand our knowledge of how FcRn is controlling albumin homeostasis at a molecular level, which will guide design and engineering of novel albumin variants with altered transport properties.
白蛋白是血液中含量最丰富的蛋白质,作为多种分子(如脂肪酸、代谢物、激素和毒素)的多转运体发挥着关键作用。此外,它还能结合多种药物。其作为分布剂的作用得益于其长达3周的超长血清半衰期。这与其大小以及与细胞受体FcRn的结合有关,FcRn可使白蛋白免于细胞内降解。此外,白蛋白的长半衰期激发了人们对将其用作蛋白质治疗药物和化学药物载体的浓厚且不断增长的兴趣。然而,为了全面了解FcRn如何作为白蛋白稳态的调节因子,并在药物设计中利用FcRn与白蛋白的相互作用,需要剖析其相互作用界面。在此,我们使用了一组针对人FcRn的单克隆抗体,结合定点诱变和结构建模,来揭示白蛋白阻断抗体和白蛋白在受体上的结合位点,结果表明这种相互作用不仅严格依赖pH值,而且本质上主要是疏水性的。具体而言,我们提供了机制证据,证明一组保守色氨酸残基起着关键作用,这些残基暴露了FcRn的一个pH敏感环,并确定了这些热点残基附近的结构差异,这些差异解释了FcRn不同的跨物种结合特性。我们的研究结果扩展了我们对FcRn如何在分子水平上控制白蛋白稳态的认识,这将指导设计和构建具有改变运输特性的新型白蛋白变体。