Abstract
Antibodies are highly potent therapeutic scaffolds with more than a hundred different products approved on the market. Successful development of antibody-based drugs requires a trade-off between high target specificity and target binding affinity. In order to better understand this problem, we here review non-specific interactions and explore their fundamental physicochemical origins. We discuss the role of surface patches — clusters of surface-exposed amino acid residues with similar physicochemical properties — as inducers of non-specific interactions. These patches collectively drive interactions including dipole–dipole, π-stacking and hydrophobic interactions to complementary moieties. We elucidate links between these supramolecular assembly processes and macroscopic development issues, such as decreased physical stability and poor in vivo half-life. Finally, we highlight challenges and opportunities for optimizing protein binding specificity and minimizing non-specificity for future generations of therapeutics. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
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CITATION STYLE
Ausserwöger, H., Schneider, M. M., Herling, T. W., Arosio, P., Invernizzi, G., Knowles, T. P. J., & Lorenzen, N. (2022, December 1). Non-specificity as the sticky problem in therapeutic antibody development. Nature Reviews Chemistry. Nature Research. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41570-022-00438-x
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