¾ÅÓÎÌåÓý

Journal News

¾ÅÓÎÌåÓý: This protein makes
antibody drugs work

Laurel Oldach
Nov. 1, 2019

Hundreds of therapeutic antibody drugs target cell-surface molecules in cancers and other diseases. But different patients respond differently to antibody therapy, and doctors struggle to predict who will benefit most.

CD 16 receptors
An artist’s rendering shows CD16 receptors on a natural killer cell (blue) binding to the constant region of an antibody (orange) that also is bound to a target molecule.

Except for a few used to ferry drugs or toxins to a specific cell population, most antibodies work by recruiting the immune system. When natural killer cells, the body’s tiny assassins, recognize antibodies coating a target cell, the NK cells latch onto the target and kill it.

Kashyap Patel, a grad student at Iowa State University, studies the receptor CD16a, receptor protein on natural killer cells that recognizes and binds to antibodies. Patel and his advisor, , now a professor at the University of Georgia, were interested in changes to CD16a that might underlie binding changes.

“CD16a in our bodies is different than the CD16a that’s used to test monoclonal antibodies,” Patel said. Whereas the recombinant version used in laboratories has limited posttranslational modifications, the human version is glycosylated at five different sites. Glycosylation, which happens in the endoplasmic reticulum, can add complex branched structures to a protein; those modifications can alter proteins’ binding characteristics and could in principle make CD16a more or less likely to bind to antibodies.

Scientists know that a genetic polymorphism near one N-glycosylation site in CD16a can influence how well antibody treatment works. It isn’t clear whether that polymorphism affects glycans directly or whether genetic changes that do affect glycans affect CD16a-antibody binding. Studying the variations in glycan structure at each site is difficult, because isolating enough CD16a from a single person to analyze poses a technical challenge.

In in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics, Patel, Barb and colleagues report that they studied post-translational modifications to CD16a in glycopeptide samples harvested from the natural killer cells of individual plasma donors. Then they used glycomics tools to determine the structures of the glycans.

“We weren’t expecting the variability we saw,” Patel said. At five sites in CD16a, the team found substantial variability in the structure of glycans — both among the donors and within each individual.

The researchers don’t know yet what to make of the glycan variability, because the donor pool was small and few studies of this type have been done. However, now that the protocol for studying glycan composition from a single person is worked out, Barb’s lab hopes to determine whether changes to that composition affect the immune system’s response to antibody therapy.

When Patel started this project, he didn’t know much about protein glycosylation, but he said he intends to keep studying it as a postdoctoral fellow.

“Once you see a protein with N-glycans on it, you cannot unsee it. You can’t ignore it.”

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition monthly.

Learn more
Laurel Oldach

Laurel Oldach is a former science writer for the ASBMB.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Bacterial enzyme catalyzes body odor compound formation
Journal News

Bacterial enzyme catalyzes body odor compound formation

June 27, 2025

Researchers identify a skin-resident Staphylococcus hominis dipeptidase involved in creating sulfur-containing secretions. Read more about this recent Journal of Biological Chemistry paper.

Neurobiology of stress and substance use
Profile

Neurobiology of stress and substance use

June 19, 2025

MOSAIC scholar and proud Latino, Bryan Cruz of Scripps Research Institute studies the neurochemical origins of PTSD-related alcohol use using a multidisciplinary approach.

Pesticide disrupts neuronal potentiation
Journal News

Pesticide disrupts neuronal potentiation

June 17, 2025

New research reveals how deltamethrin may disrupt brain development by altering the protein cargo of brain-derived extracellular vesicles. Read more about this recent Molecular & Cellular Proteomics article.

A look into the rice glycoproteome
Journal News

A look into the rice glycoproteome

June 17, 2025

Researchers mapped posttranslational modifications in Oryza sativa, revealing hundreds of alterations tied to key plant processes. Read more about this recent Molecular & Cellular Proteomics paper.

Proteomic variation in heart tissues
Journal News

Proteomic variation in heart tissues

June 17, 2025

By tracking protein changes in stem cell–derived heart cells, researchers from Cedars-Sinai uncovered surprising diversity — including a potential new cell type — that could reshape how we study and treat heart disease.

Parsing plant pigment pathways
Webinar

Parsing plant pigment pathways

June 13, 2025

Erich Grotewold of Michigan State University, an ASBMB Breakthroughs speaker, discusses his work on the genetic regulation of flavonoid biosynthesis.