Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
23212 Journal of Biotechnology 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Chelation of bound metal inhibited Aβ hydrolysis by a catalytic antibody fragment.•The metal accelerated a reaction step after initial antibody nucleophilic attack.•The hydrolytic but not chelator-inactivated antibody dissolved Aβ aggregates.•Zn-induced conformational transitions were associated with restored catalysis.•The antibody requires bound metal for efficient Aβ hydrolysis and dissolution.

Catalytic antibodies (catabodies) that degrade target antigens rapidly are rare. We describe the metal-dependence of catabody construct 2E6, an engineered heterodimer of immunoglobulin light chain variable domains that hydrolyzes amyloid β peptides (Aβ) specifically. In addition to the electrophilic phosphonate inhibitor of serine proteases, the metal chelators ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and 1,10-phenanthroline completely inhibited the hydrolysis of Aβ by catabody 2E6. Formation of catabody-electrophilic phosphonate inhibitor adducts was unaffected by EDTA, suggesting that the metal exerts a favorable effect on a catalytic step after the initial catabody nucleophilic attack on Aβ. The EDTA inactivated catabody failed to disaggregate fibrillar Aβ, indicating the functional importance of the Aβ hydrolytic activity. Treating the EDTA-inactivated catabody with Zn2+ or Co2+ restored the Aβ hydrolytic activity, and Zn2+-induced catabody conformational transitions were evident by fluorescence emission spectroscopy. The studies reveal the absolute catabody dependence on a metal cofactor.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
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