Macromolecular protease
inhibitors and camelid single-domain antibodies
achieve their enzymic inhibition functions often through protruded
structures that directly interact with catalytic centers of targeted
proteases. Inspired by this phenomenon, we constructed synthetic human
antibody libraries encoding long CDR-H3s, from which highly selective
monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that inhibit multiple proteases were
discovered. To elucidate their molecular mechanisms, we performed
in-depth biochemical characterizations on a panel of matrix metalloproteinase
(MMP)-14 inhibitory mAbs. Assays included affinity and potency measurements,
enzymatic kinetics, a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay,
proteolytic stability, and epitope mapping followed by quantitative
analysis of binding energy changes. The results collectively indicated
that these mAbs of convex paratopes were competitive inhibitors recognizing
the vicinity of the active cleft, with their significant epitopes
scattered across the north and south rims of the cleft. Remarkably,
identified epitopes were the surface loops that were highly diverse
among MMPs and predominately located at the prime side of the proteolytic
site, shedding light on the mechanisms of target selectivity and proteolytic
resistance. Substrate sequence profiling and paratope mutagenesis
further suggested that mAb 3A2 bound to the active-site cleft in a
canonical (substrate-like) manner, by direct interactions between 100hNLVATP100m of its CDR-H3 and subsites S1–S5′
of MMP-14. Overall, synthetic mAbs carrying convex paratopes can achieve
efficient inhibition and thus hold great therapeutic promise for effectively
and safely targeting biomedically important proteases.