AI Article Synopsis

  • Protein aggregation is a major issue in the production and use of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, affecting their effectiveness and stability by reducing yield and potentially causing immunogenic reactions.* -
  • To combat this, researchers are engineering proteins by adding glycosylation sites near aggregation-prone regions, which helps shield these regions and improve stability, as demonstrated in the Fab region of adalimumab.* -
  • Recent studies confirmed the success of adding glycosylation sites in Trastuzumab, showing improved structural diversity in its glycan profile and enhanced stability, effectively reducing protein aggregation.*

Article Abstract

Protein aggregation constitutes a recurring complication in the manufacture and clinical use of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mAb) and mAb derivatives. Antibody aggregates can reduce production yield, cause immunogenic reactions, decrease the shelf-life of the pharmaceutical product and impair the capacity of the antibody monomer to bind to its cognate antigen. A common strategy to tackle protein aggregation involves the identification of surface-exposed aggregation-prone regions (APR) for replacement through protein engineering. It was shown that the insertion of -glycosylation sequons on amino acids proximal to an aggregation-prone region can increase the physical stability of the protein by shielding the APR, thus preventing self-association of antibody monomers. We recently implemented this approach in the Fab region of full-size adalimumab and demonstrated that the thermodynamic stability of the Fab domain increases upon -glycosite addition. Previous experimental data reported for this technique have lacked appropriate confirmation of glycan occupancy and structural characterization of the ensuing glycan profile. Herein, we mutated previously identified candidate positions on the Fab domain of Trastuzumab and employed tandem mass spectrometry to confirm attachment and obtain a detailed -glycosylation profile of the mutants. The Trastuzumab glycomutants displayed a glycan profile with significantly higher structural heterogeneity compared to the HEK Trastuzumab antibody, which contains a single -glycosylation site per heavy chain located in the CH2 domain of the Fc region. These findings suggest that Fab -glycosites have higher accessibility to enzymes responsible for glycan maturation. Further, we have studied effects on additional glycosylation on protein stability via accelerated studies by following protein folding and aggregation propensities and observed that additional glycosylation indeed enhances physical stability and prevent protein aggregation. Our findings shed light into mAb glycobiology and potential implications in the application of this technique for the development of "biobetter" antibodies.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8620955PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics13111747DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

glycan profile
12
protein aggregation
12
physical stability
8
fab domain
8
additional glycosylation
8
protein
7
glycan
6
profile analysis
4
analysis engineered
4
trastuzumab
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!