Antibody recognition of a unique tumor-specific glycopeptide antigen

CL Brooks, A Schietinger, SN Borisova, P Kufer… - Proceedings of the …, 2010 - pnas.org
CL Brooks, A Schietinger, SN Borisova, P Kufer, M Okon, T Hirama, CR MacKenzie…
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010pnas.org
Aberrant glycosylation and the overexpression of certain carbohydrate moieties is a
consistent feature of cancers, and tumor-associated oligosaccharides are actively
investigated as targets for immunotherapy. One of the most common aberrations in
glycosylation patterns is the presentation of a single O-linked N-acetylgalactosamine on a
threonine or serine residue known as the “Tn antigen.” Whereas the ubiquitous nature of Tn
antigens on cancers has made them a natural focus of vaccine research, such carbohydrate …
Aberrant glycosylation and the overexpression of certain carbohydrate moieties is a consistent feature of cancers, and tumor-associated oligosaccharides are actively investigated as targets for immunotherapy. One of the most common aberrations in glycosylation patterns is the presentation of a single O-linked N-acetylgalactosamine on a threonine or serine residue known as the “Tn antigen.” Whereas the ubiquitous nature of Tn antigens on cancers has made them a natural focus of vaccine research, such carbohydrate moieties are not always tumor-specific and have been observed on embryonic and nonmalignant adult tissue. Here we report the structural basis of binding of a complex of a monoclonal antibody (237mAb) with a truly tumor-specific glycopeptide containing the Tn antigen. In contrast to glycopeptide-specific antibodies in complex with simple peptides, 237mAb does not recognize a conformational epitope induced in the peptide by sugar substitution. Instead, 237mAb uses a pocket coded by germ-line genes to completely envelope the carbohydrate moiety itself while interacting with the peptide moiety in a shallow groove. Thus, 237mAb achieves its striking tumor specificity, with no observed physiological cross-reactivity to the unglycosylated peptide or the free glycan, by a combination of multiple weak but specific interactions to both the peptide and to the glycan portions of the antigen.
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