Redesign of a cross-reactive antibody to dengue virus with broad-spectrum activity and increased in vivo potency

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Abstract

Affinity improvement of proteins, including antibodies, by computational chemistry broadly relies on physics-based energy functions coupled with refinement. However, achieving significant enhancement of binding affinity (>10-fold) remains a challenging exercise, particularly for cross-reactive antibodies. We describe here an empirical approach that captures key physicochemical features common to antigen-antibody interfaces to predict protein-protein interaction and mutations that confer increased affinity. We apply this approach to the design of affinity-enhancing mutations in 4E11, a potent cross-reactive neutralizing antibody to dengue virus (DV), without a crystal structure. Combination of predicted mutations led to a 450-fold improvement in affinity to serotype 4 of DV while preserving, or modestly increasing, affinity to serotypes 1-3 of DV. We show that increased affinity resulted in strong in vitro neutralizing activity to all four serotypes, and that the redesigned antibody has potent antiviral activity in a mouse model of DV challenge. Our findings demonstrate an empirical computational chemistry approach for improving protein-protein docking and engineering antibody affinity, which will help accelerate the development of clinically relevant antibodies.

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Tharakaraman, K., Robinson, L. N., Hatas, A., Chen, Y. L., Siyue, L., Raguram, S., … Sasisekharan, R. (2013). Redesign of a cross-reactive antibody to dengue virus with broad-spectrum activity and increased in vivo potency. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(17). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1303645110

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