The structural analysis of shark IgNAR antibodies reveals evolutionary principles of immunoglobulins

Matthias J. Feige(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Melissa Ann Gräwert(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Moritz Marcinowski(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Janosch Hennig(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Julia Behnke(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), David M. Auslander(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Eva Maria Herold(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Jirka Peschek(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Caitlin D. Castro(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Martin F. Flajnik(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Linda M. Hendershot(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Michael Sattler(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), M. Groll(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich), Johannes Büchner(Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
May 15, 2014
Cited by 93Open Access
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Abstract

Sharks and other cartilaginous fish are the phylogenetically oldest living organisms that rely on antibodies as part of their adaptive immune system. They produce the immunoglobulin new antigen receptor (IgNAR), a homodimeric heavy chain-only antibody, as a major part of their humoral adaptive immune response. Here, we report the atomic resolution structure of the IgNAR constant domains and a structural model of this heavy chain-only antibody. We find that despite low sequence conservation, the basic Ig fold of modern antibodies is already present in the evolutionary ancient shark IgNAR domains, highlighting key structural determinants of the ubiquitous Ig fold. In contrast, structural differences between human and shark antibody domains explain the high stability of several IgNAR domains and allowed us to engineer human antibodies for increased stability and secretion efficiency. We identified two constant domains, C1 and C3, that act as dimerization modules within IgNAR. Together with the individual domain structures and small-angle X-ray scattering, this allowed us to develop a structural model of the complete IgNAR molecule. Its constant region exhibits an elongated shape with flexibility and a characteristic kink in the middle. Despite the lack of a canonical hinge region, the variable domains are spaced appropriately wide for binding to multiple antigens. Thus, the shark IgNAR domains already display the well-known Ig fold, but apart from that, this heavy chain-only antibody employs unique ways for dimerization and positioning of functional modules.


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