Immunoblotting studies suggested hydrolysis of FLAG-E2 at a bond within E2 located ϳ11 kDa from the N terminus. GST-E2 was hydrolyzed by the hybrid IgG at bonds in the GST tag. The differing cleavage pattern of FLAG-E2 and GST-E2 can be explained by the split-site model of catalysis, in which conformational differences in the E2 fusion protein substrates position alternate peptide bonds in register with the antibody catalytic subsite despite a common noncovalent binding mechanism. These studies provide proof-of-principle that the catalytic activity of a light chain can be rendered antigen-specific by pairing with a noncovalently binding heavy chain subunit.
Antibodies (Abs)2 are composed of light and heavy chain subunits linked by intra-and inter-chain disulfide bonds. The noncovalent antigen binding site of Abs is formed mainly by amino acids located in the complementarity determining regions of the light and heavy chain variable domains (V L and V H domains). Physiological Ab-antigen binding reactions require both Ab subunits. The individual light and heavy chains can bind antigens independent of each other, but the binding affinity of the isolated subunits is often lower than the intact Abs from which they are derived (1-4). From crystallography analyses of Ab-antigen complexes, it appears that antigen contact areas with the V H domain are somewhat greater than the V L domain (5, 6). Recombinant IgG Abs composed of the heavy chain drawn from antigen-specific IgGs paired with irrelevant light chains retain antigen binding activity, albeit at reduced levels (1, 3).Following the initial noncovalent antigen binding step, some Abs proceed to catalyze hydrolysis of peptide bonds (7-12). The chemical catalysis step entails nucleophilic attack on the electrophilic carbonyl of peptide bonds by serine protease-like sites present in Ab V domains followed by hydrolysis of the covalent reaction intermediate if a water molecule is available (13-15). Unlike reversible binding, the catalytic function offers a means to permanently inactivate the antigen by its hydrolysis into smaller fragments. Reversibly binding Abs bind the antigen stoichiometrically (e.g. 2 antigen molecules/IgG molecule). As catalysts are reusable, a single catalytic Ab molecule can hydrolyze multiple antigen molecules. This offers the possibility of increased antigen neutralizing potency. Therefore, there is considerable interest in developing catalytic Abs directed to individual polypeptide antigens. The serine protease-like activity is a heritable trait encoded by germline Ab V genes, and Abs in the preimmune repertoire can hydrolyze peptides with diverse sequence promiscuously (13,14,16,17). However, the adaptive immune system has evolved to maximize noncovalent binding affinity of Abs over the course of B cell differentiation. Physiological immune mechanisms do not favor retention and improvement of the catalytic function. B cell clonal proliferation is driven by antigen binding to B cell receptors (Abs associated with signal transducing proteins). A...