Combinatorially restricted computational design of protein-protein interfaces to produce IgG heterodimers

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Abstract

Redesigning protein-protein interfaces is an important tool for developing therapeutic strategies. Interfaces can be redesigned by in silico screening, which allows for efficient sampling of a large protein space before experimental validation. However, computational costs limit the number of combinations that can be reasonably sampled. Here, we present combinatorial tyrosine (Y)/serine (S) selection (combYSelect), a computational approach combining in silico determination of the change in binding free energy (ΔΔG) of an interface with a highly restricted library composed of just two amino acids, tyrosine and serine. We used combYSelect to design two immunoglobulin G (IgG) heterodimers—combYSelect1 (L368S/D399Y-K409S/T411Y) and combYSelect2 (D399Y/K447S-K409S/T411Y)—that exhibit near-optimal heterodimerization, without affecting IgG stability or function. We solved the crystal structures of these heterodimers and found that dynamic π-stacking interactions and polar contacts drive preferential heterodimeric interactions. Finally, we demonstrated the utility of our combYSelect heterodimers by engineering both a bispecific antibody and a cytokine trap for two unique therapeutic applications.

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Azzam, T., Du, J. J., Flowers, M. W., Ali, A. V., Hunn, J. C., Vijayvargiya, N., … Sundberg, E. J. (2024). Combinatorially restricted computational design of protein-protein interfaces to produce IgG heterodimers. Science Advances, 10(15). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adk8157

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