home > bioproject > PRJEB15301
identifier PRJEB15301
type bioproject
sameAs
organism
title This study provides detailed structure-function information of single-domain antibodies binding influenza hemagglutinin, information which further supports the suitability of nanobodies as universal binding reagents for vaccine potency assays.
description Understanding the precise structure and function of cross-neutralising single domain antibodies (nanobodies) against influenza is crucial in evaluating their potential as analytical reagents and immunotherapeutics. By using yeast display in combination with deep mutational scanning, we have generated a high resolution map of amino acid residues in the antibody-HA interface which are crucial for binding. In addition, we have mapped positions within HA predicted to have minimal effect on antibody binding when mutated. Our cross-neutralising nanobodies were shown to bind to a highly conserved pocket in the HA2 domain of A(H1N1)pdm09 influenza virus overlapping with the fusion peptide suggesting their mechanism of action is through the inhibition of viral membrane fusion. Although all five cross-neutralising nanobodies mapped to the same highly conserved binding pocket we observed distinct differences in the size of the epitope footprint which has implications in comparing the relative genetic barrier each nanobody presents to a rapidly evolving influenza virus. To further refine our epitope map, we have re-created naturally occurring mutations within this HA stem epitope and tested their effect on binding using yeast display. We have shown that a D46N mutation in the HA2 stem domain uniquely interferes with binding of nanobody R2b-E8. Further testing of this substitution in the context of full length purified HA from 1918 H1N1 pandemic (Spanish flu), 2009 H1N1 pandemic (swine flu) and highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 demonstrated binding correlated with the presence of D46 whereas binding to seasonal H1N1 strains carrying N46 was absent. In addition, our deep sequence analysis predicted that binding to the emerging H1N1 strain (A/Christchurch/16/2010) carrying the HA2-E47K mutation would not affect binding was confirmed experimentally.
data type Other
organization
publication
external link