Epitope Identification
and Affinity Determination
of an Inhibiting Human Antibody to Interleukin IL8 (CXCL8) by SPR-
Biosensor–Mass Spectrometry Combination
posted on 2019-12-13, 14:03authored byPascal Wiegand, Loredana Lupu, Nico Hüttmann, Julia Wack, Stephan Rawer, Michael Przybylski, Katja Schmitz
The polypeptide chemokine Interleukin-8 (IL8) plays a
crucial role
in inflammatory processes in humans. IL8 is involved in chronic inflammatory
lung diseases, rheumatoid arthritis, and cancer. Previous studies
have shown that the interaction of IL8 with its natural receptors
CXCR1 and CXCR2 is critical in these diseases. Antibodies have been
used to study the receptor interaction of IL8; however, the binding
epitopes were hitherto unknown. Identification of the antibody epitope(s)
could lead to a molecular understanding of the inhibiting mechanism
and development of improved inhibitors. Here, we report the epitope
identification and the affinity characterization of IL8 to a monoclonal
anti-human IL8 antibody inhibiting the receptor binding by a combination
of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor analysis and MALDI-mass
spectrometry. SPR determination of IL8 with the immobilized antibody
revealed high affinity (KD, 82.2 nM).
Epitope identification of IL-8 was obtained by proteolytic epitope-extraction
mass spectrometry of the peptide fragments upon high pressure trypsin
digestion, using an affinity microcolumn with immobilized anti-IL-8
antibody. MALDI-MS of the affinity-bound peptide elution fraction
revealed an assembled (discontinuous) epitope comprising two specific
peptides, IL8 [12–20] and IL8 [55–60]. Identical epitope
peptides were identified by direct MALDI-MS of the eluted epitope
fraction from the immobilized anti-IL8 antibody on the SPR chip. SPR
determination of the synthetic epitope peptides provided high affinities
confirming their binding specificity. The previously reported finding
that the anti-Il8 antibody is inhibiting the IL8–CXCR1 interaction
is well consistent with the overlapping region of epitope interactions
identified in the present study.