OBJECTIVES: Individual immunoglobulins expressed by B-cell lymphomas represent tumor-specific antigens ('idiotypes'). Immunization with idiotype in follicular lymphoma patients may induce specific immune responses, sustained progression-free survival, and disappearance of minimal residual disease. Manufacturing of idiotype vaccines has mostly relied on heterohybridomas established from viable lymphoma cells. This paper describes the feasibility of production of GMP-grade idiotype vaccines as recombinant Fab fragments in Escherichia coli. METHODS: IgH and IgL transcripts were analyzed by anchored PCR from 106 lymphoma and nine control biopsies. Lymphoma-derived V segments were inserted into prokaryotic expression plasmids. Recombinant idiotype Fab fragments were expressed in E. coli in a fermentation system. RESULTS: Idiotype IgH and IgL transcripts were identified in 95% of 106 lymphoma biopsies according to stringent clonality criteria. Large-scale idiotype expression was successful in 69 of 78 cases (89%) and yielded a median of 17 mg (range: 1.2-250 mg) recombinant Fab protein. After affinity chromatography, median vaccine purity was 99% heterodimeric Fab protein (range: 72-100%). Bacterial protein contamination was detectable in one vaccine only. Fab proteins with IgL lambda chains had a tendency for inferior yield and lesser purity than kappa-type Fabs. Among other structural idiotype features (isotype, V family usage, somatic hypermutation pattern, novel glycosylation sites, CDR III net charge), no consistent influences on Fab yield or purity were detected. CONCLUSIONS: Anchored PCR cloning and subsequent protein expression in E. coli provides a reliable technological basis for clinical idiotype vaccination trials.
OBJECTIVES: Individual immunoglobulins expressed by B-cell lymphomas represent tumor-specific antigens ('idiotypes'). Immunization with idiotype in follicular lymphomapatients may induce specific immune responses, sustained progression-free survival, and disappearance of minimal residual disease. Manufacturing of idiotype vaccines has mostly relied on heterohybridomas established from viable lymphoma cells. This paper describes the feasibility of production of GMP-grade idiotype vaccines as recombinant Fab fragments in Escherichia coli. METHODS: IgH and IgL transcripts were analyzed by anchored PCR from 106 lymphoma and nine control biopsies. Lymphoma-derived V segments were inserted into prokaryotic expression plasmids. Recombinant idiotype Fab fragments were expressed in E. coli in a fermentation system. RESULTS: Idiotype IgH and IgL transcripts were identified in 95% of 106 lymphoma biopsies according to stringent clonality criteria. Large-scale idiotype expression was successful in 69 of 78 cases (89%) and yielded a median of 17 mg (range: 1.2-250 mg) recombinant Fab protein. After affinity chromatography, median vaccine purity was 99% heterodimeric Fab protein (range: 72-100%). Bacterial protein contamination was detectable in one vaccine only. Fab proteins with IgL lambda chains had a tendency for inferior yield and lesser purity than kappa-type Fabs. Among other structural idiotype features (isotype, V family usage, somatic hypermutation pattern, novel glycosylation sites, CDR III net charge), no consistent influences on Fab yield or purity were detected. CONCLUSIONS: Anchored PCR cloning and subsequent protein expression in E. coli provides a reliable technological basis for clinical idiotype vaccination trials.
Authors: Dimitrios Papaioannou; Anna-Maria Strothmeyer; Marcus Dühren-von Minden; Andrea Keppler-Hafkemeyer; Katja Zirlik; Kristina Mikesch; Cornelis A M van Bergen; Marcelo A Navarrete; Hendrik Veelken Journal: Haematologica Date: 2015-01-23 Impact factor: 9.941
Authors: Marcus Dühren-von Minden; Rudolf Übelhart; Dunja Schneider; Thomas Wossning; Martina P Bach; Maike Buchner; Daniel Hofmann; Elena Surova; Marie Follo; Fabian Köhler; Hedda Wardemann; Katja Zirlik; Hendrik Veelken; Hassan Jumaa Journal: Nature Date: 2012-09-13 Impact factor: 49.962
Authors: Martin Trepel; Victoria Martens; Christian Doll; Janina Rahlff; Barbara Gösch; Sonja Loges; Mascha Binder Journal: PLoS One Date: 2012-02-22 Impact factor: 3.240