July 8, 2023
Journal Article

Shaping Nanobodies and Intrabodies Against Proteoforms

Abstract

Proteoforms expand genomic diversity and direct developmental processes. While high-resolution mass spectrometry has accelerated characterization of proteoforms, molecular techniques working to bind, and disrupt the function of specific proteoforms have lagged behind. In this study, we worked to develop intrabodies capable of binding specific proteoforms. We employed a synthetic camelid nanobody library expressed in yeast to identify nanobody binders of different SARS-CoV-2 receptor binding domain (RBD) proteoforms. Importantly, employment of the positive and negative selection mechanism inherent to the synthetic system allowed for amplification of nanobody-expressing yeast that bind to the original (Wuhan strain RBD) but not the E484K (Beta variant) mutation. Nanobodies raised against specific RBD proteoforms were validated by yeast-2-hybrid analysis and sequence comparisons. These results provide a clear framework for development of proteoform-specific nanobodies and intrabodies.

Published: July 8, 2023

Citation

Leonard B., V.G. Danna, L.J. Gorham, M.R. Davison, W.B. Chrisler, D. Kim, and R.V. Gerbasi. 2023. Shaping Nanobodies and Intrabodies Against Proteoforms. Analytical Chemistry 95, no. 23:8747–8751. PNNL-SA-182135. doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.3c00958