Abstract

The integrity of antibody structure, stability, and biophysical characterization are becoming increasingly important as antibodies receive increasing scrutiny from regulatory authorities. We altered the disulfide bond arrangement of an IgG4 molecule by mutation of the Cys at the N terminus of the heavy chain constant domain 1 (C(H)1) (Kabat position 127) to a Ser and introduction of a Cys at a variety of positions (positions 227-230) at the C terminus of C(H)1. An inter-LC-C(H)1 disulfide bond is thus formed, which mimics the disulfide bond arrangement found in an IgG1 molecule. The antibody species present in the supernatant following transient expression in Chinese hamster ovary cells were analyzed by immunoblot to investigate product homogeneity, and purified product was analyzed by a thermofluor assay to determine thermal stability. We show that the light chain can form an inter-LC-C(H)1 disulfide bond with a Cys when present at several positions on the upper hinge (positions 227-230) and that such engineered disulfide bonds can consequently increase the Fab domain thermal stability between 3 and 6.8 °C. The IgG4 disulfide mutants displaying the greatest increase in Fab thermal stability were also the most homogeneous in terms of disulfide bond arrangement and antibody species present. Importantly, mutations did not affect the affinity for antigen of the resultant molecules. In combination with the previously described S241P mutation, we present an IgG4 molecule with increased Fab thermal stability and reduced product heterogeneity that potentially offers advantages for the production of IgG4 molecules.

Highlights

  • IgG1 and IgG4 have different inter-light chain-heavy chain disulfide bond (DSB) arrangements

  • Immunoblot Analysis of IgG4 Molecules with Altered InterLC-chain domain 1 (CH1) DSB Arrangements—Analysis by immunoblot under non-reducing conditions of the expressed material in cell culture supernatants showed a number of distinct bands

  • We have altered the DSB arrangement of an IgG4 to mimic that of IgG1, and our results show that the light chain (LC) Cys-214 residue can form a DSB with the heavy chains (HC) if the HC Cys is at position 227, 228, 229, or 230

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Summary

Background

IgG1 and IgG4 have different inter-light chain-heavy chain disulfide bond (DSB) arrangements. In combination with the previously described S241P mutation, we present an IgG4 molecule with increased Fab thermal stability and reduced product heterogeneity that potentially offers advantages for the production of IgG4 molecules. In combination with the previously reported S241P mutation [20], we present an IgG4 molecule with reduced levels of product DSB heterogeneity and increased Fab domain stability compared with IgG4 WT. The interhinge DSBs at positions 239 and 242 have been shown to be liable to form intrahinge DSBs generating half-molecules that can covalently reassociate with an IgG4 half-molecule of the same or a different variable region [20, 21] This phenomenon is known to involve CH3 [22] and the core hinge of the antibody [20], but the mechanism that drives this process is not well understood or characterized.

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