Selection and Characterization of Monoclonal Antibodies Targeting Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus through a Human Synthetic Fab Phage Display Library Panning

Yoonji Kim(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Hansaem Lee, Keunwan Park(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Sora Park(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Ju‐Hyeon Lim(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Min Kyung So(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Hye‐Min Woo, Hyemin Ko, Jeong Min Lee, Sun Hee Lim, Byoung Joon Ko(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Yeon-Su Park, Soyoung Choi(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Du Hyun Song(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation), Jooyeon Lee, Sung Soon Kim, Dae Young Kim(Osong Medical Innovation Foundation)
Antibodies
July 31, 2019
Cited by 22Open Access
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Abstract

Since its first report in the Middle East in 2012, the Middle East respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (MERS-CoV) has become a global concern due to the high morbidity and mortality of individuals infected with the virus. Although the majority of MERS-CoV cases have been reported in Saudi Arabia, the overall risk in areas outside the Middle East remains significant as inside Saudi Arabia. Additional pandemics of MERS-CoV are expected, and thus novel tools and reagents for therapy and diagnosis are urgently needed. Here, we used phage display to develop novel monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that target MERS-CoV. A human Fab phage display library was panned against the S2 subunit of the MERS-CoV spike protein (MERS-S2P), yielding three unique Fabs (S2A3, S2A6, and S2D5). The Fabs had moderate apparent affinities (Half maximal effective concentration (EC50 = 123–421 nM) for MERS-S2P, showed no cross-reactivity to spike proteins from other CoVs, and were non-aggregating and thermostable (Tm = 61.5–80.4 °C). Reformatting the Fabs into IgGs (Immunoglobulin Gs) greatly increased their apparent affinities (KD = 0.17–1.2 nM), presumably due to the effects of avidity. These apparent affinities were notably higher than that of a previously reported anti-MERS-CoV S2 reference mAb (KD = 8.7 nM). Furthermore, two of the three mAbs (S2A3 and S2D5) bound only MERS-CoV (Erasmus Medical Center (EMC)) and not other CoVs, reflecting their high binding specificity. However, the mAbs lacked MERS-CoV neutralizing activity. Given their high affinity, specificity, and desirable stabilities, we anticipate that these anti-MERS-CoV mAbs would be suitable reagents for developing antibody-based diagnostics in laboratory or hospital settings for point-of-care testing.


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