The molecular reach of antibodies crucially underpins their viral neutralisation capacity.

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Tác giả: Michael I Barton, Charlotte M Deane, Wanwisa Dejnirattisai, Robert Donat, Omer Dushek, Anna Huhn, Samuel A Isaacson, William James, Mikhail A Kutuzov, Chang Liu, Juthathip Mongkolsapaya, Daniel Nissley, Gavin Screaton, Piyada Supasa, Tiong Kit Tan, Alain Townsend, P Anton van der Merwe, Daniel B Wilson, Ying Zhang

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: England : Nature communications , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 720651

 Key functions of antibodies, such as viral neutralisation, depend on high-affinity binding. However, viral neutralisation poorly correlates with antigen affinity for reasons that have been unclear. Here, we use a new mechanistic model of bivalent binding to study  >
 45 patient-isolated IgG1 antibodies interacting with SARS-CoV-2 RBD surfaces. The model provides the standard monovalent affinity/kinetics and new bivalent parameters, including the molecular reach: the maximum antigen separation enabling bivalent binding. We find large variations in these parameters across antibodies, including reach variations (22-46 nm) that exceed the physical antibody size (~15 nm). By using antigens of different physical sizes, we show that these large molecular reaches are the result of both the antibody and antigen sizes. Although viral neutralisation correlates poorly with affinity, a striking correlation is observed with molecular reach. Indeed, the molecular reach explains differences in neutralisation for antibodies binding with the same affinity to the same RBD-epitope. Thus, antibodies within an isotype class binding the same antigen can display differences in molecular reach, substantially modulating their binding and functional properties.
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