The Thermodynamic Fingerprints of Ultra-Tight Nanobody-Antigen Binding Probed via Two-Color Single-Molecule Coincidence Detection

Int J Mol Sci. 2023 Nov 15;24(22):16379. doi: 10.3390/ijms242216379.

Abstract

Life on the molecular scale is based on a versatile interplay of biomolecules, a feature that is relevant for the formation of macromolecular complexes. Fluorescence-based two-color coincidence detection is widely used to characterize molecular binding and was recently improved by a brightness-gated version which gives more accurate results. We developed and established protocols which make use of coincidence detection to quantify binding fractions between interaction partners labeled with fluorescence dyes of different colors. Since the applied technique is intrinsically related to single-molecule detection, the concentration of diffusing molecules for confocal detection is typically in the low picomolar regime. This makes the approach a powerful tool for determining bi-molecular binding affinities, in terms of KD values, in this regime. We demonstrated the reliability of our approach by analyzing very strong nanobody-EGFP binding. By measuring the affinity at different temperatures, we were able to determine the thermodynamic parameters of the binding interaction. The results show that the ultra-tight binding is dominated by entropic contributions.

Keywords: Van’t Hoff plot; antibody–antigen interaction; binding affinity; brightness-gated two-color coincidence detection (BTCCD); burst analysis; confocal fluorescence microscopy; nanobodies; single-molecule fluorescence detection; thermodynamic parameters.

MeSH terms

  • Diffusion
  • Reproducibility of Results*
  • Thermodynamics

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.