posted on 2002-12-10, 00:00authored byJoanne Cleary, Gary D. Glick
11F8 is a murine anti-ssDNA monoclonal autoantibody isolated from a lupus prone autoimmune
mouse. This mAb binds sequence specifically, and prior studies have defined the thermodynamic and
kinetic basis for sequence-specific recognition of ssDNA (Ackroyd, P. C., et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40,
2911−2922; Beckingham, J. A. and Glick, G. D. (2001) Bioorg. Med. Chem. 9, 2243−2252). Here we
present experiments designed to identify the residues on 11F8 that mediate sequence-specific, noncognate,
and nonspecific recognition of ssDNA and their contribution to the overall binding thermodynamics.
Site-directed mutagenesis of an 11F8 single-chain construct reveals that six residues within the
complementarity determining regions of 11F8 account for ca. 80% of the binding free energy and that
there is little cooperativity between these residues. Germline-encoded aromatic and hydrophobic side
chains provides the basis for nonspecific recognition of single-stranded thymine nucleobases. Sequence-specific recognition is controlled by a tyrosine in the heavy chain along with a somatically mutated arginine
residue. Our data show that the manner in which 11F8 achieves sequence-specific recognition more closely
resembles RNA-binding proteins such as U1A than other types of nucleic acid binding proteins. In addition,
comparing the primary sequence of 11F8 with clonally related antibodies that differ by less than five
amino acids suggests that somatic mutations which confer sequence specificity may be a feature that
distinguishes glomerulotrophic pathogenic anti-DNA from those that are benign.