| Literature DB >> 15247913 |
Elisabetta Traggiai1, Stephan Becker, Kanta Subbarao, Larissa Kolesnikova, Yasushi Uematsu, Maria Rita Gismondo, Brian R Murphy, Rino Rappuoli, Antonio Lanzavecchia.
Abstract
Passive serotherapy can confer immediate protection against microbial infection, but methods to rapidly generate human neutralizing monoclonal antibodies are not yet available. We have developed an improved method for Epstein-Barr virus transformation of human B cells. We used this method to analyze the memory repertoire of a patient who recovered from severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV) infection and to isolate monoclonal antibodies specific for different viral proteins, including 35 antibodies with in vitro neutralizing activity ranging from 10(-8)M to 10(-11)M. One such antibody confers protection in vivo in a mouse model of SARS-CoV infection. These results show that it is possible to interrogate the memory repertoire of immune donors to rapidly and efficiently isolate neutralizing antibodies that have been selected in the course of natural infection.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15247913 PMCID: PMC7095806 DOI: 10.1038/nm1080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440
Repertoire analysis of IgG memory B cells
| Months after infection | Positive cultures/total cultures screened (%)a | |
|---|---|---|
| ELISA | Spike-staining | |
| 2 | 275/480 (57.3%) | ND |
| 4 | 123/480 (25.6%) | 12/576 (2.1%) |
| 6 | 44/480 (9.2%) | 21/768 (2.7%) |
| 8 | 20/480 (4.1%) | 94/3,102 (3%) |
aFraction of cultures screening positive in the SARS-CoV ELISA or staining SARS-CoV spike transfectants at different time points after infection. IgG+ memory B cells were cultured at 10 cells per well in the presence of EBV and CpG 2006. Culture supernatants were analyzed after 2 weeks. There was no overlap between cultures screening positive by either assay, indicating that the assays detect distinct antibody specificities. SARS-CoV was not detectable in culture supernatant or in EBV-B cells, as determined by cytopathic assay on Vero cells and by RT-PCR (data not shown). ND, not determined because the assay was not available at the time of the analysis.
EBV immortalized B cell clones secreting monoclonal antibodies to SARS-CoV
| Monoclonal antibody | Isotype | Specificity | Neutralizing antibody concentration (ng IgG/ml)d |
|---|---|---|---|
| S18.1 | IgG,κ | NPa | nn |
| S20.1 | IgG,λ | NP | nn |
| S21.1 | IgG,κ | NP | nn |
| S23.4 | IgG,κ | NP | nn |
| S24.1 | IgG,λ | NP | nn |
| S5.1 | IgG,κ | Ea | nn |
| S13.1 | IgG,κ | NDb | nn |
| S3.1 | IgG,κ | Spikec | 300 |
| S101.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 40 |
| S102.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 850 |
| S103.3 | IgG,κ | Spike | 350 |
| S104.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 150 |
| S105.2 | IgG,κ | Spike | 150 |
| S106.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 45 |
| S107.4 | IgG,κ | Spike | 75 |
| S108.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 40 |
| S109.2 | IgG,κ | Spike | 80 |
| S132.9 | IgG,κ | Spike | 200 |
| S128.5 | IgG,κ | Spike | 25 |
| S127.6 | IgG,κ | Spike | 40 |
| S124.4 | IgG,κ | Spike | 40 |
| S159.1 | IgG,λ | Spike | 25 |
| S160.1 | IgG,κ | Spike | 15 |
| S215.13 | IgG,κ | Spike | 1 |
| S216.9 | IgG,κ | Spike | 15 |
| S217.2 | IgG,κ | Spike | 4 |
| S218.6 | IgG,κ | Spike | 7 |
| S219.2 | IgG,κ | Spike | 8 |
aRecognizes NP or E protein in western blot.
bStains SARS-CoV-infected cells but specificity could not be determined.
cStains spike-transfected BHK cells.
dIndicates final IgG concentration in culture conferring complete SARS-CoV neutralization. Data represent mean values of at least three determinations. n.n., non-neutralizing.
Figure 1Characterization of the SARS-CoV neutralizing S3.1 monoclonal antibody.
(a) Staining of BHK cells transfected with SARS-CoV spike mRNA by purified S3.1 antibody (circles) and by the 6 months convalescent serum (squares). The filled symbols indicate the antibody concentration at which complete neutralization was observed. (b,c) Staining of SARS-CoV detected by immunoelectron microscopy. Top left, negative control; top right three panels, convalescent serum; bottom left, supernatant of a non-neutralizing B cell clone; bottom right three panels, S3.1 monoclonal antibody. Bar, 100 nm.
Protection from virus replication in the mouse respiratory tract after transfer of the anti-SARS-CoV antibody S3.1
| Passive transfer antibody | Virus replication in challenged mice | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lungs | Nasal turbinates | |||
| No. infected/no. tested | Mean (±s.e.m.) virus titer | No. infected/no. tested | Mean (±s.e.m.) virus titer | |
| S3.1 sup | 0/4 | ≤1.5 ± 0 | 4/4 | 4.8 ± 0.32 |
| S3.1, 800 μg | 0/4 | ≤1.5 ± 0 | 2/4 | 2.5 ± 0.47 |
| S3.1, 200 μg | 0/4 | ≤1.5 ± 0 | 4/4 | 3.4 ± 0.41 |
| S3.1, 50 μg | 2/4 | 3.2 ± 1.36 | 4/4 | 4.8 ± 0.75 |
| M12, 800 μg | 4/4 | 7.5 ± 0.1 | 4/4 | 6.4 ± 0.41 |
The indicated amounts of purified antibody (in 500 μl) or S3.1 culture supernatant (sup; 2 ml, 10 μg/ml) were administered to recipient mice by intraperitoneal injection 24 h before intranasal challenge with 104 TCID50 SARS-CoV. Monoclonal antibody M12 (human IgG1,κ) was injected as a negative control. Virus titers measured after 2 d are expressed as log10 TCID50 per gram of tissue. The lower limit of detection of infectious virus in a 10% w/v suspension of lung homogenate was 1.5 log10TCID50 per g and in 5% w/v suspension of nasal turbinates was 1.8 log10TCID50 per g. Comparisons that were statistically significantly different (P < 0.05) in a Student's t-test were: in lungs, 800 μg S3.1 versus 800 μg M12, 200 μg S3.1 versus 800 μg M12, and 50 μg S3.1 versus 800 μg M12; in nasal turbinates, 800 μg S3.1 versus 800 μg M12 and 200 μg S3.1 versus 800 μg M12.
Figure 2Binding and neutralization capacity of monoclonal antibodies specific for SARS-CoV spike.
Shown is the staining of BHK cells transfected with SARS-CoV spike mRNA by serial dilutions of ten neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. The symbols indicate the neutralizing titer: that is, the antibody dilution added in the neutralization assay that gave complete viral neutralization.