| Literature DB >> 25110827 |
Hiroki Shirai1, Catherine Prades2, Randi Vita3, Paolo Marcatili4, Bojana Popovic5, Jianqing Xu5, John P Overington6, Kazunori Hirayama1, Shinji Soga1, Kazuhisa Tsunoyama1, Dominic Clark6, Marie-Paule Lefranc7, Kazuyoshi Ikeda8.
Abstract
More and more antibody therapeutics are being approved every year, mainly due to their high efficacy and antigen selectivity. However, it is still difficult to identify the antigen, and thereby the function, of an antibody if no other information is available. There are obstacles inherent to the antibody science in every project in antibody drug discovery. Recent experimental technologies allow for the rapid generation of large-scale data on antibody sequences, affinity, potency, structures, and biological functions; this should accelerate drug discovery research. Therefore, a robust bioinformatic infrastructure for these large data sets has become necessary. In this article, we first identify and discuss the typical obstacles faced during the antibody drug discovery process. We then summarize the current status of three sub-fields of antibody informatics as follows: (i) recent progress in technologies for antibody rational design using computational approaches to affinity and stability improvement, as well as ab-initio and homology-based antibody modeling; (ii) resources for antibody sequences, structures, and immune epitopes and open drug discovery resources for development of antibody drugs; and (iii) antibody numbering and IMGT. Here, we review "antibody informatics," which may integrate the above three fields so that bridging the gaps between industrial needs and academic solutions can be accelerated. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Recent advances in molecular engineering of antibody.Keywords: Antibody database; Antibody informatics; Antibody modeling; Antibody numbering; Drug discovery
Year: 2014 PMID: 25110827 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbapap.2014.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta ISSN: 0006-3002