Development of ultra-efficient antibodies for single cell mapping applications - PROJECT SUMMARY
Single cell (SC) epigenomics is a rapidly emerging field, driven by recent technology advances and the
diverse roles that epigenetic features play in controlling gene activation. Histone post-translational modifications
(PTMs) represent some of the most relevant and widely studied epigenomic factors in disease. Recent
development of scCUT&Tag (SC Cleavage Under Targets and Tagmentation) provides the first tractable
approach to map histone PTMs at SC resolution. This approach uses antibodies to bind chromatin proteins in
situ, and then tethers a protein A-protein G and hyperactive Tn5 transposase (pAG-Tn5) fusion to these sites
for tagmentation. Targeted DNA is then amplified and sequenced, delivering a streamlined, ultrasensitive assay
for histone PTM mapping. Despite this progress, SC applications still present a unique challenge, as they
generate incredibly sparse data (i.e. relatively few reads / SC) and require antibodies to exhibit high on-target
epitope binding (i.e. efficiency) with minimal off-target binding (i.e. specificity). We envision that ultra-efficient
antibodies could provide a new class of “SC-grade” antibodies that display highly efficient on-target
recovery, which will dramatically improve assay sensitivity and reliability. However, the development of
antibodies for SC applications is lacking, and pipelines that screen antibody candidate clones for high binding
efficiency on nucleosomes do not exist. Here, EpiCypher is developing a novel antibody screening method
to generate ultra-efficient “SC-grade” antibodies to leverage the full potential of scCUT&Tag technology for the
epigenetic drug discovery research market. The innovation of our strategy is the application of recombinant
modified designer nucleosome (dNuc) technology during antibody development. First, candidate clones
are screened by ELISA for on-target binding using a biotinylated dNuc carrying the PTM target. Second,
candidate clones are screened using a high-throughput multiplex assay (NucleoPlex™) wherein dNucs carrying
on- and off- target PTMs are conjugated to barcoded Luminex xMAP beads. Third, successful candidates are
purified and further analyzed for antibody specificity and efficiency using DNA-barcoded SNAP-ChIP® spike-in
controls. In preliminary studies, we used our novel approach to select and validate ultra-efficient antibodies for
several PTM targets, developing antibodies that exhibit a >5-10x increase in nucleosome capture
efficiency; these high efficiency antibodies generated far superior signal-to-noise (S/N) in CUT&Tag assays (vs.
current best-in-class antibodies). In Phase I, our goal is to demonstrate that ultra-efficient antibodies improve 1)
S/N in low input bulk CUT&Tag assays, 2) the number of unique reads / cell in scCUT&Tag assays and 3) enable
analysis of high value, low abundance marks (e.g. H3K4me3). In Phase II, we will use this novel pipeline to
expand development of ultra-efficient histone PTM antibodies against a broad range of high value targets. These
antibodies will also be used to develop low input and SC CUT&Tag assay kits to further our understanding of
chromatin biology and develop improved therapeutics and diagnostics.