The specificity of cross-reactivity: Promiscuous antibody binding involves specific hydrogen bonds rather than nonspecific hydrophobic stickiness

被引:108
|
作者
James, LC
Tawfik, DS [1 ]
机构
[1] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Biol Chem, IL-76100 Rehovot, Israel
[2] MRC, Mol Biol Lab, Cambridge CB2 2HQ, England
关键词
catalytic promiscuity; multi specificity; moonlighting; autoimmunity; hydrophobicity;
D O I
10.1110/ps.03172703
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Proteins are renowned for their specificity of function. There is, however, accumulating evidence that many proteins, from enzymes to antibodies, are functionally promiscuous. Promiscuity is of considerable physiological importance. In the immune system, cross-reactive or multispecific antibodies are implicated in autoimmune and allergy conditions. In most cases, however, the mechanism behind promiscuity and the relationship between specific and promiscuous activities are unknown. Are the two contradictory? Or can a protein exhibit several unrelated activities each of which is highly specific? To address these questions, we studied a multispecific IgE antibody (SPE7) elicited against a 2,4-dinitrophenyl hapten (DNP). SPE7 is able to distinguish between closely related derivatives such as NP (nitrophenol) and DNP, yet it can also bind a number of unrelated ligands. We find that, like DNP, the cross-reactants are themselves bound specifically-close derivatives of these cross-reactants show very low or no binding to SPET It has been suggested that cross-reactivity is simply due to "hydrophobic stickiness", nonspecific interactions between hydrophobic ligands and binding sites. However, partitioning experiments reveal that affinity for SPE7 is unrelated to ligand hydrophobicity. These data, combined with crystal structures of SPE7 in complex with four different ligands, demonstrate that each cross-reactant is bound specifically, forming different hydrogen bonds dependant upon its particular chemistry and the availability of complementary antibody residues. SPE7 is highly homologous to the germline antinitrophenol (NP) antibody B1-8. By comparing the sequences and binding patterns of SPE7 and B1-8, we address the relationship between affinity maturation, specificity, and cross-reactivity.
引用
收藏
页码:2183 / 2193
页数:11
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Differences in electrostatic properties at antibody-antigen binding sites: Implications for specificity and cross-reactivity
    Sinha, N
    Mohan, S
    Lipschultz, CA
    Smith-Gill, SJ
    [J]. BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2002, 83 (06) : 2946 - 2968
  • [2] Specificity and cross-reactivity of Plasmodium falciparum variant surface antigen-specific antibody responses
    Hviid, L
    Staalsoe, T
    Nielsen, MA
    Theander, TG
    [J]. INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 2003, 71 (04) : 2296 - 2296
  • [3] The Scope of Allo-HLA Cross-Reactivity By (Third Party) Virus Specific T Cells Is Surprisingly Affected By HLA Restriction Rather Than Virus Specificity
    Huisman, Wesley
    Leboux, Didier A. T.
    van der Maarel, Lieve E.
    Hageman, Lois
    Amsen, Derk
    Falkenburg, J. H. Frederik
    Jedema, Inge
    [J]. BLOOD, 2018, 132
  • [4] Cross-Reactivity of N6AMT1 Antibodies with Aurora Kinase A: An Example of Antibody-Specific Non-Specificity
    Brumele, Baiba
    Serova, Evgeniia
    Lupp, Aleksandra
    Suija, Mihkel
    Mutso, Margit
    Kurg, Reet
    [J]. ANTIBODIES, 2024, 13 (02)
  • [5] BINDING OF KLEBSIELLA-K2 LPS TO SPECIFIC ANTIBODY AND CROSS-REACTIVITY WITH PNEUMOCOCCAL GROUP-19 POLYSACCHARIDES (PS)
    LI, JP
    CHING, ED
    LEE, CJ
    [J]. FEDERATION PROCEEDINGS, 1987, 46 (06) : 2200 - 2200
  • [6] LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE EPITOPE SPECIFICITY AND BINDING CROSS-REACTIVITY OF THE HUMAN-IGM ANTI-LIPID A MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODY SDJ5-1.17.15
    KAZEMI, M
    HUNTENBURG, CC
    BUBBERS, JE
    [J]. MOLECULAR IMMUNOLOGY, 1993, 30 (10) : 895 - 902
  • [7] Modeling the binding sites of anti-hen egg white lysozyme antibodies HyHEL-8 and HyHEL-26: An insight into the molecular basis of antibody cross-reactivity and specificity
    Mohan, S
    Sinha, N
    Smith-Gill, J
    [J]. BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2003, 85 (05) : 3221 - 3236