Solid-Phase Bioconjugation of Heterobifunctional Adaptors
for Versatile Assembly of Bispecific Targeting Ligands
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Abstract
High-throughput generation of bispecific
molecules promises to
expedite the discovery of new molecular therapeutics and guide engineering
of novel multifunctional constructs. However, high synthesis complexity
and cost have hampered the discovery of bispecific molecules in drug
development and biomedical research. Herein we describe a simple solid-phase
bioconjugation procedure for preparation of Protein A(G,L)-PEG-Streptavidin
heterobifunctional adaptors (with 1:1:1 stoichiometry), which enable
self-assembly of unmodified antibodies and biotinylated molecules
into bispecific targeting ligands in a versatile mix-and-use manner.
Utility of such adaptors is demonstrated by assembly of anti-CD3 and
anti-Her2 antibodies into bispecific CD3xHer2 targeting ligands, which
efficiently drive T-cell-mediated lysis of Her2-positive cancer cells.
In comparison to bioconjugation in solution, the solid-phase procedure
described here offers precise stoichiometry control, ease of purification,
and high yield of functional conjugates. Simplicity and versatility
should prove this methodology instrumental for preparation of bispecific
ligands, as well as for high-throughput screening of bispecific combinations,
before proceeding to synthesis of lead candidates via recombinant
engineering or chemical cross-linking