A Rough Energy Landscape to Describe Surface-Linked Antibody and Antigen Bond Formation

Antibodies and B cell receptors often bind their antigen at cell-cell interface while both molecular species are surface-bound, which impacts bond kinetics and function. Despite the description of complex energy landscapes for dissociation kinetics which may also result in significantly different as...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2016-10, Vol.6 (1), p.35193-35193, Article 35193
Hauptverfasser: Limozin, Laurent, Bongrand, Pierre, Robert, Philippe
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibodies and B cell receptors often bind their antigen at cell-cell interface while both molecular species are surface-bound, which impacts bond kinetics and function. Despite the description of complex energy landscapes for dissociation kinetics which may also result in significantly different association kinetics, surface-bound molecule (2D) association kinetics usually remain described by an on-rate due to crossing of a single free energy barrier, and few experimental works have measured association kinetics under conditions implying force and two-dimensional relative ligand-receptor motion. We use a new laminar flow chamber to measure 2D bond formation with systematic variation of the distribution of encounter durations between antigen and antibody, in a range from 0.1 to 10 ms. Under physiologically relevant forces, 2D association is 100-fold slower than 3D association as studied by surface plasmon resonance assays. Supported by brownian dynamics simulations, our results show that a minimal encounter duration is required for 2D association; an energy landscape featuring a rough initial part might be a reasonable way of accounting for this. By systematically varying the temperature of our experiments, we evaluate roughness at 2 k B T , in the range of previously proposed rough parts of landscapes models during dissociation.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/srep35193