Exploring cellular biochemistry with nanobodies
Author(s)
Cheloha, Ross W; Harmand, Thibault J; Wijne, Charlotte; Schwartz, Thomas U; Ploegh, Hidde L
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© 2020 Cheloha et al. Published under exclusive license by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc. Reagents that bind tightly and specifically to biomolecules of interest remain essential in the exploration of biology and in their ultimate application to medicine. Besides ligands for receptors of known specificity, agents commonly used for this purpose are monoclonal antibodies derived from mice, rabbits, and other animals. However, such antibodies can be expensive to produce, challenging to engineer, and are not necessarily stable in the context of the cellular cytoplasm, a reducing environment. Heavy chain-only antibodies, discovered in camelids, have been truncated to yield single-domain antibody fragments (VHHs or nanobodies) that overcome many of these shortcomings. Whereas they are known as crystallization chaperones for membrane proteins or as simple alternatives to conventional antibodies, nanobodies have been applied in settings where the use of standard antibodies or their derivatives would be impractical or impossible. We review recent examples in which the unique properties of nanobodies have been combined with complementary methods, such as chemical functionalization, to provide tools with unique and useful properties.
Date issued
2020Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of BiologyJournal
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Publisher
Elsevier BV