Mechanism of glycoform specificity and in vivo protection by an anti-afucosylated IgG nanobody.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Gupta A, Kao K, Yamin R, Oren D, Goldgur Y, Du J, Lollar P, Sundberg E, Ravetch J
Journal Nat Commun
Volume 14
Issue 1
Pagination 2853
Date Published 05/18/2023
ISSN 2041-1723
Keywords Immunoglobulin G, Receptors, IgG
Abstract Immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies contain a complex N-glycan embedded in the hydrophobic pocket between its heavy chain protomers. This glycan contributes to the structural organization of the Fc domain and determines its specificity for Fcγ receptors, thereby dictating distinct cellular responses. The variable construction of this glycan structure leads to highly-related, but non-equivalent glycoproteins known as glycoforms. We previously reported synthetic nanobodies that distinguish IgG glycoforms. Here, we present the structure of one such nanobody, X0, in complex with the Fc fragment of afucosylated IgG1. Upon binding, the elongated CDR3 loop of X0 undergoes a conformational shift to access the buried N-glycan and acts as a 'glycan sensor', forming hydrogen bonds with the afucosylated IgG N-glycan that would otherwise be sterically hindered by the presence of a core fucose residue. Based on this structure, we designed X0 fusion constructs that disrupt pathogenic afucosylated IgG1-FcγRIIIa interactions and rescue mice in a model of dengue virus infection.
DOI 10.1038/s41467-023-38453-1
PubMed ID 37202422
PubMed Central ID PMC10195009
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