Login / Signup

The Use of Fluoroproline in MUC1 Antigen Enables Efficient Detection of Antibodies in Patients with Prostate Cancer.

Víctor J SomovillaIris A BermejoInês S AlbuquerqueNuria Martínez-SáezJorge Castro-LópezFayna García-MartínIsmael CompañónHiroshi HinouShin-Ichiro NishimuraJiménez-Barbero JesúsJuan L AsensioAlberto AvenozaJesús H BustoRamón Hurtado-GuerreroJesus M PeregrinaGonçalo J L BernardesFrancisco Corzana
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
A structure-based design of a new generation of tumor-associated glycopeptides with improved affinity against two anti-MUC1 antibodies is described. These unique antigens feature a fluorinated proline residue, such as a (4S)-4-fluoro-l-proline or 4,4-difluoro-l-proline, at the most immunogenic domain. Binding assays using biolayer interferometry reveal 3-fold to 10-fold affinity improvement with respect to the natural (glyco)peptides. According to X-ray crystallography and MD simulations, the fluorinated residues stabilize the antigen-antibody complex by enhancing key CH/π interactions. Interestingly, a notable improvement in detection of cancer-associated anti-MUC1 antibodies from serum of patients with prostate cancer is achieved with the non-natural antigens, which proves that these derivatives can be considered better diagnostic tools than the natural antigen for prostate cancer.
Keyphrases