Maximum cut (Max-Cut) problem is one of the most important combinatorial
optimization problems because of its various applications in real life, and
recently Quantum Approximate Optimization Algorithm (QAOA) has been widely
employed to solve it. However, as the size of the problem increases, the number
of qubits required will become larger. With the aim of saving qubits, we
propose a coupling framework for designing QAOA circuits to solve larger-scale
Max-Cut problem. This framework relies on a classical algorithm that
approximately solves a certain variant of Max-Cut, and we derive an
approximation guarantee theoretically, assuming the approximation ratio of the
classical algorithm and QAOA. Furthermore we design a heuristic approach that
fits in our framework and perform sufficient numerical experiments, where we
solve Max-Cut on various 24-vertex Erd\H{o}s-R\'enyi graphs. Our framework
only consumes 18 qubits and achieves 0.9950 approximation ratio on average,
which outperforms the previous methods showing 0.9778 (quantum algorithm
using the same number of qubits) and 0.9643 (classical algorithm). The
experimental results indicate our well-designed quantum-classical coupling
framework gives satisfactory approximation ratio while reduces the qubit cost,
which sheds light on more potential computing power of NISQ devices