1] Center for Advanced Bioanalysis, A-4020 Linz, Austria [2] Institute of Biophysics, Johannes Kepler University Linz, A-4020 Linz, Austria.
Bio-AFM Frontier Research Center, Kanazawa University, Kakuma-machi, Kanazawa 920-1192, Japan.
Nat Commun. 2014 Jul 10;5:4394. doi: 10.1038/ncomms5394.
Binding of antibodies to their cognate antigens is fundamental for adaptive immunity. Molecular engineering of antibodies for therapeutic and diagnostic purposes emerges to be one of the major technologies in combating many human diseases. Despite its importance, a detailed description of the nanomechanical process of antibody-antigen binding and dissociation on the molecular level is lacking. Here we utilize high-speed atomic force microscopy to examine the dynamics of antibody recognition and uncover a principle; antibodies do not remain stationary on surfaces of regularly spaced epitopes; they rather exhibit 'bipedal' stochastic walking. As monovalent Fab fragments do not move, steric strain is identified as the origin of short-lived bivalent binding. Walking antibodies gather in transient clusters that might serve as docking sites for the complement system and/or phagocytes. Our findings could inspire the rational design of antibodies and multivalent receptors to exploit/inhibit steric strain-induced dynamic effects.
抗体与其同源抗原的结合是适应性免疫的基础。出于治疗和诊断目的对抗体进行分子工程改造已成为对抗许多人类疾病的主要技术之一。尽管其重要性不言而喻,但在分子水平上详细描述抗体-抗原结合和解离的纳米力学过程仍有所欠缺。在这里,我们利用高速原子力显微镜来研究抗体识别的动力学,并揭示了一个原理:抗体在规则间隔的抗原表面上并非保持静止,而是表现出“双足”随机行走。由于单价 Fab 片段不会移动,因此空间应变被确定为短寿命双价结合的起源。行走的抗体聚集在短暂的簇中,这些簇可能充当补体系统和/或吞噬细胞的对接位点。我们的发现可能会启发对抗体和多价受体的合理设计,以利用/抑制由空间应变引起的动态效应。