Abstract
The binding affinity of antibodies to specific antigens stems from a remarkably broad repertoire of hypervariable loops known as complementarity-determining regions (CDRs). While recognizing the pivotal role of the heavy-chain 3 CDRs (CDR-H3s) in maximizing antibody-antigen affinity and specificity, the key structural determinants responsible for their adaptability to diverse loop sequences, lengths, and non-canonical structures are hitherto unknown. To address this question, we achieved a de novo synthesis of bulged CDR-H3 mimics excised from their full antibody context. CD and NMR data revealed that these stable standalone -hairpin scaffolds are well-folded and retain many of the native bulge CDR-H3 features in water. In particular, the tryptophan residue highly conserved across CDR-H3 sequences was found to extend the kinked base of these -bulges through a combination of stabilizing intramolecular hydrogen bond and CH/ interaction. The structural ensemble consistent with our NMR observations exposed the dynamic nature of residues at the base of the loop, suggesting that -bulges act as molecular hinges connecting the rigid stem to the more flexible loops of CDR-H3s. We anticipate that this deeper structural understanding of CDR-H3s will lay the foundation to inform the design of antibody drugs broadly and engineer novel CDR-H3 peptide scaffolds as therapeutics.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
Synthesis and characterization data of novel bulge-like CDR-H3 standalone scaffolds.
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