Design of high-affinity binders to immune modulating receptors for cancer immunotherapy

Wei Yang(University of Washington), Derrick R. Hicks(University of Washington), Agnidipta Ghosh(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Tristin A. Schwartze(University of Pittsburgh), Brian Coventry(University of Washington), Inna Goreshnik(University of Washington), Aza Allen(University of Washington), Samer Halabiya(University of Washington), Chan Johng Kim(University of Washington), Cynthia S. Hinck(University of Pittsburgh), David Lee(University of Washington), Asim K. Bera(University of Washington), Zhe Li(University of Washington), Yujia Wang(University of Washington), Thomas Schlichthaerle(University of Washington), Longxing Cao(University of Washington), Buwei Huang(University of Washington), Sarah Garrett(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Stacey Gerben(University of Washington), Stephen Rettie(University of Washington), Piper Heine(University of Washington), Analisa Murray(University of Washington), Natasha I. Edman(University of Washington), Lauren Carter(University of Washington), Lance Stewart(University of Washington), Steven C. Almo(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Andrew P. Hinck(University of Pittsburgh), David Baker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Nature Communications
February 26, 2025
Cited by 26Open Access
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Abstract

Immune receptors have emerged as critical therapeutic targets for cancer immunotherapy. Designed protein binders can have high affinity, modularity, and stability and hence could be attractive components of protein therapeutics directed against these receptors, but traditional Rosetta based protein binder methods using small globular scaffolds have difficulty achieving high affinity on convex targets. Here we describe the development of helical concave scaffolds tailored to the convex target sites typically involved in immune receptor interactions. We employed these scaffolds to design proteins that bind to TGFβRII, CTLA-4, and PD-L1, achieving low nanomolar to picomolar affinities and potent biological activity following experimental optimization. Co-crystal structures of the TGFβRII and CTLA-4 binders in complex with their respective receptors closely match the design models. These designs should have considerable utility for downstream therapeutic applications.


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