In vitro validated antibody design against multiple therapeutic antigens using generative inverse folding

Amir Shanehsazzadeh, Julian Alverio, George Kasun, Simon Levine, Jibran A Khan, Chelsea Chung, Nicolas Diaz, Breanna K Luton, Ysis Tarter, Cailen McCloskey, Katherine B Bateman,Hayley Carter, Dalton Chapman, Rebecca Consbruck, Alec Jaeger, Christa Kohnert, Gaelin Kopec-Belliveau,John M Sutton, Zheyuan Guo, Gustavo Canales, Kai Ejan, Emily Marsh, Alyssa Ruelos, Rylee Ripley, Brooke Stoddard, Rodante Caguiat, Kyra Chapman, Matthew Saunders, Jared Sharp, Douglas Ganini da Silva, Audree Feltner, Jake Ripley, Megan E Bryant, Danni Castillo,Joshua Meier, Christian M Stegmann, Katherine Moran, Christine Lemke,Shaheed Abdulhaqq, Lillian R Klug, Sharrol Bachas

biorxiv(2023)

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摘要
Deep learning approaches have demonstrated the ability to design protein sequences given backbone structures [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. While these approaches have been applied in silico to designing antibody complementarity-determining regions (CDRs), they have yet to be validated in vitro for designing antibody binders, which is the true measure of success for antibody design. Here we describe IgDesign, a deep learning method for antibody CDR design, and demonstrate its robustness with successful binder design for 8 therapeutic antigens. The model is tasked with designing heavy chain CDR3 (HCDR3) or all three heavy chain CDRs (HCDR123) using native backbone structures of antibody-antigen complexes, along with the antigen and antibody framework (FWR) sequences as context. For each of the 8 antigens, we design 100 HCDR3s and 100 HCDR123s, scaffold them into the native antibody's variable region, and screen them for binding against the antigen using surface plasmon resonance (SPR). As a baseline, we screen 100 HCDR3s taken from the model's training set and paired with the native HCDR1 and HCDR2. We observe that both HCDR3 design and HCDR123 design outperform this HCDR3- only baseline. IgDesign is the first experimentally validated antibody inverse folding model. It can design antibody binders to multiple therapeutic antigens with high success rates and, in some cases, improved affinities over clinically validated reference antibodies. Antibody inverse folding has applications to both de novo antibody design and lead optimization, making IgDesign a valuable tool for accelerating drug development and enabling therapeutic design. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors are current or former employees, contractors, interns, or executives of Absci Corporation and may hold shares in Absci Corporation.
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