Characterization of a Sulfated Anti-HIV Antibody Using
an Expanded Genetic Code
Posted on 2018-05-08 - 00:00
Tyrosine sulfation is a crucial post-translational
modification for certain antibodies that neutralize HIV. One of the
most neutralizing sulfated anti-HIV antibodies, E51, contains a region
in its VHCDR3 loop with five tyrosine (Tyr) residues, which
are hypothesized to be partially or fully sulfated to bind to HIV’s
gp120 coat protein. However, the gp120-binding contribution of each
sulfate or more complex sulfation patterns is unknown. In addition,
natural sulfation of Tyr-rich loops usually yields a mixture of multiply
sulfated products, complicating attempts to dissect the function of
individual E51 sulfoforms with unique sulfation patterns. Here, we
use an upgraded expanded genetic code for sulfotyrosine (sY) to express
homogeneous E51 sulfoforms containing up to five sulfates. Through
characterization of the 32 possible sulfoforms of E51, we show that
only a subset of E51 sulfoforms with two, three, or four sYs bind
to gp120 with potency similar to that of post-translationally sulfated
E51, which we find is a mixture of sulfoforms. We show that sulfation
of Tyr100i is necessary for gp120 binding whereas sulfation of Tyr100n
is detrimental to binding. These results reveal that gp120 binding
by E51 requires very specific sulfation patterns and should aid in
the further design of sulfated E51-based peptides and immunoadhesins
against HIV.
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Li, Xiang; Hitomi, Justin; Liu, Chang C. (2018). Characterization of a Sulfated Anti-HIV Antibody Using
an Expanded Genetic Code. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00374