From llamas to yeast

Producing functional therapeutic antibody fragments in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Since 2021, Phenotypeca has been collaborating with Isogenica in an IUK-funded project worth up to £400,000 to design, produce and test therapeutic antibody fragments. Isogenica is an expert in developing small antibody fragments (VHHs). During its 20-year history, Isogenica has established successful discovery partnerships with biopharma companies across the globe, as well as research collaborations with other SMEs and academic groups.

VHHs have been on the radar of life scientists and medical practitioners for their use in clinical therapeutics and immunodiagnostics since their discovery in llamas and other camelids in the early 1990s, with the first VHH-based therapeutic – caplacizumab – approved in 2019.

Biotherapeutics are most commonly manufactured in mammalian systems due to their complexity. These molecules, such as conventional antibodies or cytokines, contain multiple domains and often require distinct glycosylation patterns. VHHs are approximately 1/10th the size of conventional antibodies and generally do not require glycosylation, making them more straightforward to manufacture in microbial systems.

Although these molecules can be produced in E. coli for early-stage research, the presence of endotoxins makes this material unsuitable for later stage assays, while mammalian cell production systems are often prohibitively expensive, and it is challenging to increase throughput. Caplacizumab is manufactured in the yeast Pichia pastoris. However, this yeast strain is fed by methanol, which has both toxicity risks and poses fire hazards during large-scale manufacture. This presents a market opportunity for alternative bioproduction hosts with low cost of goods.

Phenotypeca has the world’s largest unique collection of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains bred and engineered for stable recombinant protein production. By transitioning early R&D to a final manufacturing host, drug discovery can select for high-producing clones sooner and eliminate future issues during manufacturing scale-up, such as those encountered with other microbes or mammalian cells. With this in mind, Isogenica tasked Phenotypeca with investigating whether high-quality, functional VHH proteins could be produced, secreted and displayed on the surface of a S. cerevisiae yeast cell.

Approach

The first task involved verifying that Phenotypeca’s unique collection of strains could be modified to successfully produce a range of VHH proteins. Expression of these proteins was confirmed in several different yeast strains (Fig.1), showing a very clean homogeneous product even in un-purified culture supernatant (Fig. 2). The absence of significant host-derived protein in these samples means that the product can be purified without the need for immunogenic tags or expensive affinity resins, further reducing cost of goods. In addition, it showed that Phenotypeca’s strains could also produce multi-target (bi-specific) VHH antibodies, a particular challenge for E. coli systems.

Phenotypeca then sought to improve the production and secretion of these VHHs in various yeast strains, as well as developing a method to successfully display these molecules on the surface of the yeast cell (Fig. 3).

Results

Phenotypeca successfully produced several different VHHs, both secreted and displayed, in a range of engineered yeast strains, improving secretion levels from 10-20-fold for a variety of antibody fragments. In addition, Isogenica has been able to confirm that VHH molecules produced by Saccharomyces at Phenotypeca are fully active and able to bind to target antigens, with affinities comparable to antibody fragments produced in E. coli (Fig. 4).

Conclusion

Phenotypeca’s platform has paved the way for the creation of a multi-functional toolbox for VHH discovery and production. This will lead to a reduction in time and cost of producing high-quality, functional VHHs when compared with production in E. coli and mammalian systems, and improved safety both for manufacturing and for patients compared with production in Pichia.

Recent Issues