A bait and switch hapten strategy generates catalytic antibodies for phosphodiester hydrolysis
- Departments of Chemistry and Molecular Biology, The Scripps Research Institute and The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037
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Communicated by Richard A. Lerner, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA (received for review January 30, 1998)
Abstract
General base catalysis supplied by the histidine-12 (H-12) residue of ribonuclease (RNase) A has long been appreciated as a major component of the catalytic power of the enzyme. In an attempt to harness the catalytic power of a general base into antibody catalysis of phosphodiester bond hydrolysis, the quaternary ammonium phosphate 1 was used as a bait and switch hapten. Based on precedence, it was rationalized that this positively charged hapten could induce a counter-charged residue in the antibody binding site at a locus suitable for it to deprotonate the 2′-hydroxyl group of the anhydroribitol phosphodiester substrate 2. After murine immunization with hapten 1, mAb production yielded a library of 35 antibodies that bound to a BSA-1 conjugate. From this panel, two were found to catalyze the cyclization-cleavage of phosphodiester 2. Kinetic studies at pH 7.49 (Hepes, 20 mM) and 25°C showed that the most active antibody, MATT.F-1, obeyed classical Michaelis–Menten kinetics with a K m = 104 μM, a k cat = 0.44 min− 1, and a k cat/k uncat = 1.7 × 103. Hapten 1 stoichiometrically inhibits the catalytic activity of the antibody. MATT.F-1 is the most proficient antibody–catalyst (1.6 × 107 M− 1) yet generated for the function of phosphodiester hydrolysis and emphasizes the utility of the bait and switch hapten paradigm when generating antibody catalysts for processes for which general-base catalysis can be exploited.
Footnotes
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↵ * To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: kdjanda{at}scripps.edu.
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↵ † Reaction conditions: 10 μM MATT.F-1 active sites, 1–100 μM inhibitor 2, and 200 μM substrate in Hepes (20 mM, pH 7.49).
- ABBREVIATIONS:
- DCM,
- dichloromethane;
- TCA,
- trifluoroacetic acid;
- THF,
- tetrahydrofuran;
- THP,
- tetrahydropyranyl;
- DMT,
- dimethoxytrityl
- Copyright © 1998, The National Academy of Sciences





