Small-molecule control of antibody N-glycosylation in engineered mammalian cells.
Michelle M ChangLeonid GaidukovGiyoung JungWen Allen TsengJohn J ScarcelliRichard CornellJeffrey K MarshallJonathan L LylesPaul SakorafasAn-Hsiang Adam ChuKaffa CoteBoriana TzvetkovaSepideh DolatshahiMadhuresh SumitBhanu Chandra MulukutlaDouglas A LauffenburgerBruno FigueroaNevin M SummersTimothy K LuRon WeissPublished in: Nature chemical biology (2019)
N-linked glycosylation in monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) is crucial for structural and functional properties of mAb therapeutics, including stability, pharmacokinetics, safety and clinical efficacy. The biopharmaceutical industry currently lacks tools to precisely control N-glycosylation levels during mAb production. In this study, we engineered Chinese hamster ovary cells with synthetic genetic circuits to tune N-glycosylation of a stably expressed IgG. We knocked out two key glycosyltransferase genes, α-1,6-fucosyltransferase (FUT8) and β-1,4-galactosyltransferase (β4GALT1), genomically integrated circuits expressing synthetic glycosyltransferase genes under constitutive or inducible promoters and generated antibodies with concurrently desired fucosylation (0-97%) and galactosylation (0-87%) levels. Simultaneous and independent control of FUT8 and β4GALT1 expression was achieved using orthogonal small molecule inducers. Effector function studies confirmed that glycosylation profile changes affected antibody binding to a cell surface receptor. Precise and rational modification of N-glycosylation will allow new recombinant protein therapeutics with tailored in vitro and in vivo effects for various biotechnological and biomedical applications.