Abstract
Over the last two decades, yeast display methodology has served as a popular tool for discovery, humanization, stability improvement, and affinity maturation of antibodies and antibody fragments, but also for development of diverse non-antibody protein scaffolds towards the ability of antigen recognition. Yeast display is particularly well suited for multiparametric analysis of properties of derivatized proteins, allowing the evolution of most diverse protein structures into antigen binding entities with favorable expression, stability, and folding properties. Here we present the methodological basics of a novel yeast display-based approach for the functionalization of the large extracellular loop of CD81 into a de novo antigen binding unit. CD81 is intrinsically overrepresented on the surface of extracellular vesicles (EVs), naturally occurring nanoparticle units that act as cell-to-cell messengers by delivering their intracellular cargo from the source cell into a recipient cell. This amazing feature makes them of highest biotechnological interest, yet methods for their targeted delivery are still in their infancy. As a novel approach for introducing EV surface modifications enabling specific target cell recognition and internalization, we have prepared yeast display libraries of CD81 large extracellular loop mutants, which are selected towards specific antigen binding and resulting mutants conveniently clicked into the full-length EV surface protein. Resulting EVs display wild-type-like characteristics regarding the expression level and distribution of recombinant proteins and are hence promising therapeutic tools.
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