posted on 2017-06-07, 00:00authored byEleanor
R. Gray, Jennifer C. Brookes, Christophe Caillat, Valérian Turbé, Benjamin L. J. Webb, Luke A. Granger, Benjamin S. Miller, Laura E. McCoy, Mohamed El Khattabi, C. Theo Verrips, Robin A. Weiss, Dorothy M. Duffy, Winfried Weissenhorn, Rachel A. McKendry
Preventing
the spread of infectious diseases remains an urgent
priority worldwide, and this is driving the development of advanced
nanotechnology to diagnose infections at the point of care. Herein,
we report the creation of a library of novel nanobody capture ligands
to detect p24, one of the earliest markers of HIV infection. We demonstrate
that these nanobodies, one tenth the size of conventional antibodies,
exhibit high sensitivity and broad specificity to global HIV-1 subtypes.
Biophysical characterization indicates strong 690 pM binding constants
and fast kinetic on-rates, 1 to 2 orders of magnitude better than
monoclonal antibody comparators. A crystal structure of the lead nanobody
and p24 was obtained and used alongside molecular dynamics simulations
to elucidate the molecular basis of these enhanced performance characteristics.
They indicate that binding occurs at C-terminal helices 10 and 11
of p24, a negatively charged region of p24 complemented by the positive
surface of the nanobody binding interface involving CDR1, CDR2, and
CDR3 loops. Our findings have broad implications on the design of
novel antibodies and a wide range of advanced biomedical applications.