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The interplay between binding energy and catalysis in the evolution of a catalytic antibody

Helle D. Ulrich, Emily Mundorff, Bernard D. Santarsiero, Edward M. Driggers, Raymond C. Stevens and Peter G. Schultz
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Helle D. Ulrich: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
Emily Mundorff: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
Bernard D. Santarsiero: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
Edward M. Driggers: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
Raymond C. Stevens: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley
Peter G. Schultz: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley

Nature, 1997, vol. 389, issue 6648, 271-275

Abstract: Abstract Antibody catalysis1 provides an opportunity to examine the evolution of binding energy and its relation to catalytic function in a system that has many parallels with natural enzymes. Here we report such a study involving an antibody AZ-28 that catalyses an oxy-Cope rearrangement, a pericyclic reaction that belongs to a well studied and widely used class of reactions in organic chemistry2. Immunization with transition state analogue 1 results in a germline-encoded antibody that catalyses the rearrangement of hexadiene 2 to aldehyde 3 with a rate approaching that of a related pericyclic reaction catalysed by the enzyme chorismate mutase3. Affinity maturation gives antibody AZ-28, which has six amino acid substitutions, one of which results in a decrease in catalytic rate. To understand the relationship between binding and catalytic rate in this system we characterized a series of active-site mutants and determined the three-dimensional crystal structure of the complex of AZ-28 with the transition state analogue. This analysis indicates that the activation energy depends on a complex balance of several stereoelectronic effects which are controlled by an extensive network of binding interactions in the active site. Thus in this instance the combinatorial diversity of the immune system provided both an efficient catalyst for a reaction where no enzyme is known, as well as an opportunity to explore the mechanisms and evolution of biological catalysis.

Date: 1997
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DOI: 10.1038/38470

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