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Structure-guided disulfide engineering restricts antibody conformation to elicit TNFR agonism

Author

Listed:
  • Isabel G. Elliott

    (University of Southampton
    University of Southampton
    University of Southampton
    University of Southampton)

  • Hayden Fisher

    (University of Southampton
    University of Southampton
    University of Southampton
    University of Southampton)

  • H. T. Claude Chan

    (University of Southampton)

  • Tatyana Inzhelevskaya

    (University of Southampton)

  • C. Ian Mockridge

    (University of Southampton)

  • Christine A. Penfold

    (University of Southampton)

  • Patrick J. Duriez

    (University of Southampton)

  • Christian M. Orr

    (Diamond Light Source)

  • Julie Herniman

    (University of Southampton)

  • Kri T. J. Müller

    (University of Southampton)

  • Jonathan W. Essex

    (University of Southampton
    University of Southampton)

  • Mark S. Cragg

    (University of Southampton
    University of Southampton)

  • Ivo Tews

    (University of Southampton
    University of Southampton)

Abstract

A promising strategy in cancer immunotherapy is activation of immune signalling pathways through antibodies that target co-stimulatory receptors. hIgG2, one of four human antibody isotypes, is known to deliver strong agonistic activity, and modification of hIgG2 hinge disulfides can influence immune-stimulating activity. This was shown for antibodies directed against the hCD40 receptor, where cysteine-to-serine exchange mutations caused changes in antibody conformational flexibility. Here we demonstrate that the principles of increasing agonism by restricting antibody conformation through disulfide modification can be translated to the co-stimulatory receptor h4-1BB, another member of the tumour necrosis factor receptor superfamily. Furthermore, we explore structure-guided design of the anti-hCD40 antibody ChiLob7/4 and show that engineering additional disulfides between opposing F(ab’) arms can elicit conformational restriction, concomitant with enhanced agonism. These results support a mode where subtle increases in rigidity can deliver significant improvements in immunostimulatory activity, thus providing a strategy for the rational design of more powerful antibody therapeutics.

Suggested Citation

  • Isabel G. Elliott & Hayden Fisher & H. T. Claude Chan & Tatyana Inzhelevskaya & C. Ian Mockridge & Christine A. Penfold & Patrick J. Duriez & Christian M. Orr & Julie Herniman & Kri T. J. Müller & Jon, 2025. "Structure-guided disulfide engineering restricts antibody conformation to elicit TNFR agonism," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-13, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-58773-8
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-58773-8
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Matthew G. Romei & Brandon Leonard & Zachary B. Katz & Daniel Le & Yanli Yang & Eric S. Day & Christopher W. Koo & Preeti Sharma & Jack Bevers III & Ingrid Kim & Huiguang Dai & Farzam Farahi & May Lin, 2024. "i-shaped antibody engineering enables conformational tuning of biotherapeutic receptor agonists," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-16, December.
    2. Xiaojie Yu & Christian M. Orr & H. T. Claude Chan & Sonya James & Christine A. Penfold & Jinny Kim & Tatyana Inzhelevskaya & C. Ian Mockridge & Kerry L. Cox & Jonathan W. Essex & Ivo Tews & Martin J. , 2023. "Reducing affinity as a strategy to boost immunomodulatory antibody agonism," Nature, Nature, vol. 614(7948), pages 539-547, February.
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    1. Matthew G. Romei & Brandon Leonard & Zachary B. Katz & Daniel Le & Yanli Yang & Eric S. Day & Christopher W. Koo & Preeti Sharma & Jack Bevers III & Ingrid Kim & Huiguang Dai & Farzam Farahi & May Lin, 2024. "i-shaped antibody engineering enables conformational tuning of biotherapeutic receptor agonists," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-16, December.

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