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Research article2010Peer reviewedOpen access

Structural basis for high-affinity HER2 receptor binding by an engineered protein

Eigenbrot, Charles; Ultsch, Mark; Dubnovitsky, Anatoly; Abrahmsén, Lars; Härd, Torleif

Abstract

The human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) is specifically overexpressed in tumors of several cancers, including an aggressive form of breast cancer. It is therefore a target for both cancer diagnostics and therapy. The 58 amino acid residue ZHER2 affibody molecule was previously engineered as a high-affinity binder of HER2. Here we determined the structure of ZHER2 in solution and the crystal structure of ZHER2 in complex with the HER2 extracellular domain. ZHER2 binds to a conformational epitope on HER2 that is distant from those recognized by the therapeutic antibodies trastuzumab and pertuzumab. Its small size and lack of interference may provide ZHER2 with advantages for diagnostic use or even for delivery of therapeutic agents to HER2-expressing tumors when trastuzumab or pertuzumab are already employed. Biophysical characterization shows that ZHER2 is thermodynamically stable in the folded state yet undergoing conformational interconversion on a submillisecond time scale. The data suggest that it is the HER2-binding conformation that is formed transiently prior to binding. Still, binding is very strong with a dissociation constant K(D) = 22 pM, and perfect conformational homogeneity is therefore not necessarily required in engineered binding proteins. A comparison of the original Z domain scaffold to free and bound ZHER2 structures reveals how high-affinity binding has evolved during selection and affinity maturation and suggests how a compromise between binding surface optimization and stability and dynamics of the unbound state has been reached.

Keywords

protein engineering; molecular recognition; protein-protein interactions; protein conformational dynamics; cancer therapy

Published in

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
2010, Volume: 107, number: 34, pages: 15039-15044
Publisher: NATL ACAD SCIENCES

      SLU Authors

    • Dubnovitsky, Anatoly

      • Department of Molecular Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
      • Härd, Torleif

        • Department of Molecular Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

      Sustainable Development Goals

      Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages

      UKÄ Subject classification

      Food Science

      Publication identifier

      DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1005025107

      Permanent link to this page (URI)

      https://res.slu.se/id/publ/60539