posted on 2021-01-29, 16:08authored byBenjamin
J. Tombling, Carmen Lammi, Nicole Lawrence, Jianqiang Li, Anna Arnoldi, David J. Craik, Conan K. Wang
The
epidermal growth-factor-like domain A (EGF-A) of the low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) receptor is a promising lead for therapeutic inhibition
of proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9). However,
the clinical potential of EGF-A is limited by its suboptimal affinity
for PCSK9. Here, we use phage display to identify EGF-A analogues
with extended bioactive segments that have improved affinity for PCSK9.
The most potent analogue, TEX-S2_03, demonstrated ∼130-fold
improved affinity over the parent domain and had a reduced calcium
dependency for efficient PCSK9 binding. Thermodynamic binding analysis
suggests the improved affinity of TEX-S2_03 is enthalpically driven,
indicating favorable interactions are formed between the extended
segment of TEX-S2_03 and the PCSK9 surface. The improved affinity
of TEX-S2_03 resulted in increased activity in competition binding
assays and more efficient restoration of LDL receptor levels with
clearance of extracellular LDL cholesterol in functional cell assays.
These results confirm that TEX-S2_03 is a promising therapeutic lead
for treating hypercholesterolemia. Many EGF-like domains are involved
in disease-related protein–protein interactions; therefore,
our strategy for engineering EGF-like domains has the potential to
be broadly implemented in EGF-based drug design.