Experimental analysis by site-directed mutagenesis of somatic mutation effects on affinity and fine specificity in antibodies specific for lysozyme.

1992 
To experimentally examine the functional roles of somatically derived structural variation in the lysozyme-binding mAb HyHEL-10, we have introduced three different point mutations and one insertion at two different sites in HyHEL-10 by site-directed mutagenesis and expression of the mutant antibodies. Mutation of Asp----Ala at position 101 of the H chain returns a somatically mutated residue to its germline sequence for HyHEL-10, and reduces affinity for chicken lysozyme by approximately 9000-fold. Lengthening the third H chain hypervariable region by two amino acids reduces affinity by about 2000-fold. Two mutations, Asp----Thr at position 101 in the H chain and Lys----Thr at position 49 in the L chain, model somatic differences found in another structurally related but functionally distinguishable mAb and minimally decrease affinity for chicken lysozyme. The H chain mutation Asp101VVH----Thr has little effect on affinity for other avian lysozymes but does alter relative fine specificity for these lysozymes. The L chain mutation Lys49VK----Thr increases affinity for duck lysozyme by approximately fivefold. Neither of the positions mutated, 101 in the H chain nor 49 in the L chain, nor the residues near the insertion contact lysozyme in the x-ray structure of the HyHEL-10 F(ab)-HEL complex. The results suggest that these mutations, which model observed somatic mutations, produce functional variation by indirect or long-range effects.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    135
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []