Abstract

Although myriad protein-protein interactions in nature use polyvalent binding, in which multiple ligands on one entity bind to multiple receptors on another, to date an affinity advantage of polyvalent binding has been demonstrated experimentally only in cases where the target receptor molecules are clustered prior to complex formation. Here, we demonstrate cooperativity in binding affinity (i.e., avidity) for a protein complex in which an engineered dimer of the amyloid precursor protein inhibitor (APPI), possessing two fully functional inhibitory loops, interacts with mesotrypsin, a soluble monomeric protein that does not self-associate or cluster spontaneously. We found that each inhibitory loop of the purified APPI homodimer was over three-fold more potent than the corresponding loop in the monovalent APPI inhibitor. This observation is consistent with a suggested mechanism whereby the two APPI loops in the homodimer simultaneously and reversibly bind two corresponding mesotrypsin monomers to mediate mesotrypsin dimerization. We propose a simple model for such dimerization that quantitatively explains the observed cooperativity in binding affinity. Binding cooperativity in this system reveals that the valency of ligands may affect avidity in protein-protein interactions including those of targets that are not surface-anchored and do not self-associate spontaneously. In this scenario, avidity may be explained by the enhanced concentration of ligand binding sites in proximity to the monomeric target, which may favor rebinding of the multiple ligand binding sites with the receptor molecules upon dissociation of the protein complex.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesWe aimed to close this gap by investigating the effect of avidity on a system in which all the binding sites in the polyvalent protein ligand are fully functional and the target protein, in its soluble form, is monomeric and may not self-associate or

  • Numerous biological activities in nature rely on polyvalent interactions, in which multiple ligands on one entity transiently [1] or irreversibly [2, 3] bind to multiple targets

  • To the best of our knowledge, no attempts have been made to investigate the presence of avidity effects in soluble protein complexes in which a polyvalent ligand interacts with target molecules that are not in close proximity to each other prior to polyvalent protein complex formation

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to close this gap by investigating the effect of avidity on a system in which all the binding sites in the polyvalent protein ligand are fully functional and the target protein, in its soluble form, is monomeric and may not self-associate or

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