Molecular mechanism for strengthening E-cadherin adhesion using a monoclonal antibody

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Abstract

E-cadherin (Ecad) is an essential cell-cell adhesion protein with tumor suppression properties. The adhesive state of Ecad can be modified by the monoclonal antibody 19A11, which has potential applications in reducing cancer metastasis. Using X-ray crystallography, we determine the structure of 19A11 Fab bound to Ecad and show that the antibody binds to the first extracellular domain of Ecad near its primary adhesive motif: the strand-swap dimer interface. Molecular dynamics simulations and single-molecule atomic force microscopy demonstrate that 19A11 interacts with Ecad in two distinct modes: one that strengthens the strand-swap dimer and one that does not alter adhesion. We show that adhesion is strengthened by the formation of a salt bridge between 19A11 and Ecad, which in turn stabilizes the swapped β-strand and its complementary binding pocket. Our results identify mechanistic principles for engineering antibodies to enhance Ecad adhesion.

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Xie, B., Maker, A., Priest, A. V., Dranow, D. M., Phan, J. N., Edwards, T. E., … Sivasankar, S. (2022). Molecular mechanism for strengthening E-cadherin adhesion using a monoclonal antibody. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(32). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2204473119

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