| Literature DB >> 29740455 |
Katherine E Harris1, Shelley Force Aldred1, Laura M Davison1, Heather Anne N Ogana1, Andrew Boudreau1, Marianne Brüggemann1, Michael Osborn1, Biao Ma1, Benjamin Buelow1, Starlynn C Clarke1, Kevin H Dang1, Suhasini Iyer1, Brett Jorgensen1, Duy T Pham1, Payal P Pratap1, Udaya S Rangaswamy1, Ute Schellenberger1, Wim C van Schooten1, Harshad S Ugamraj1, Omid Vafa1, Roland Buelow1, Nathan D Trinklein1.
Abstract
We created a novel transgenic rat that expresses human antibodies comprising a diverse repertoire of heavy chains with a single common rearranged kappa light chain (IgKV3-15-JK1). This fixed light chain animal, called OmniFlic, presents a unique system for human therapeutic antibody discovery and a model to study heavy chain repertoire diversity in the context of a constant light chain. The purpose of this study was to analyze heavy chain variable gene usage, clonotype diversity, and to describe the sequence characteristics of antigen-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) isolated from immunized OmniFlic animals. Using next-generation sequencing antibody repertoire analysis, we measured heavy chain variable gene usage and the diversity of clonotypes present in the lymph node germinal centers of 75 OmniFlic rats immunized with 9 different protein antigens. Furthermore, we expressed 2,560 unique heavy chain sequences sampled from a diverse set of clonotypes as fixed light chain antibody proteins and measured their binding to antigen by ELISA. Finally, we measured patterns and overall levels of somatic hypermutation in the full B-cell repertoire and in the 2,560 mAbs tested for binding. The results demonstrate that OmniFlic animals produce an abundance of antigen-specific antibodies with heavy chain clonotype diversity that is similar to what has been described with unrestricted light chain use in mammals. In addition, we show that sequence-based discovery is a highly effective and efficient way to identify a large number of diverse monoclonal antibodies to a protein target of interest.Entities:
Keywords: antibody repertoire; deep sequencing; humanized rodent; monoclonal human antibodies; rearranged light chain; somatic hypermutation; transgenic rodent
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29740455 PMCID: PMC5928204 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.00889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Summary of experimental design and analysis. The overall design of the project and subsequent analyses is shown. We performed a series of immunizations with 9 different antigens and included 75 different OmniFlic animals. We harvested 2 lymph nodes from each animal for a total of 150 different samples. Our analysis was focused on three areas: VDJ clonotype diversity by NGS, somatic hypermutation by NGS, and antigen binding by ELISA.
Figure 2Clonotype diversity in 75 OmniFlic animals. (A) Distribution of CDR3 clonotypes per animal from a total of 75 OmniFlic animals. The number of unique CDR3 clonotypes per animal ranged from 47 to 433 with a mean of 173. (B) Overlap of CDR3 clonotypes between lymph nodes of the same animal. The 173 average CDR3 clonotypes per animal, 62 are common to both lymph nodes, and the remaining 111 are unique to 1 lymph node, on average.
Figure 3IGHV-gene usage in 150 different samples. IGHV-gene usage is summarized in this heat map. Heavy chain variable regions most commonly found in natural human repertoires are also the most frequently used IGHV genes in OmniFlic. Each column is one human heavy chain V gene defined by IMGT. Each row is one lymph node sample. A blue box indicates 0% frequency of that V gene in that sample. A red box indicates 60% frequency of that V gene in that sample. Heavy white lines denote boundaries between the nine antigen groups.
Figure 4Antigen binding measured for 2,560 monoclonal FlicAbs. (A) Individual bean plots show the distribution of antigen-binding signal for 42 representative animals (6 animals immunized with 7 different antigens). The y-axis shows log transformed ELISA binding signal (fold-over background), and the horizontal line marks the threshold used for calling a FlicAb antigen positive or negative. The left three vertical columns are animals immunized with Freund’s adjuvant, and the right three columns are animals immunized with Ribi adjuvant. Each row is a different antigen. (B) The distribution of clonotype abundance (CDR3 clonotype rank) of the FlicAbs tested are shown as stacked bars where the red bar indicates ELISA negative FlicAbs and the blue indicates ELISA-positive FlicAbs. The y-axis indicates total FlicAb counts, and the x-axis category designates the abundance rank of the CDR3 clonotype. (C) The frequency of ELISA-positive FlicAbs categorized by abundance rank is shown. The y-axis indicates the frequency of ELISA positive, and the x-axis category designates the abundance rank of the CDR3 clonotype.
Figure 5Somatic hypermutation in the heavy chain variable region. (A) The distribution of the total number of amino acid (AA) mutations in the heavy chain variable region is shown for the NGS repertoire data. The x-axis indicates the total number of AA mismatches compared with germline. The y-axis indicates the total number of FlicAbs. (B) The distribution of the total number of AA mutations in the heavy chain variable region is shown for the 2,560 sequences measured for antigen binding by ELISA. The labels are the same for panel (A). (C) The frequency of ELISA-positive FlicAbs categorized by number of AA mismatches compared with germline is shown. The y-axis indicates the frequency of ELISA positive, and the x-axis category designates the number of mismatches compared with germline. (D) The AA mutation rates at each variable region position are shown for 1,770 sequences from the IGHV3 gene family. Blue bars indicate the percentage of ELISA-positive sequences with an AA mutation at that position. Red bars indicate the percentage of ELISA-positive sequences with an AA mutation at that position. The x-axis indicates the residue at each position of a representative germline sequence from the IGHV3 family. The y-axis indicates the percent of sequences with an AA mutation at a given position. (E) The AA mutation rates at each variable region position are shown for 615 sequences from the IGHV4 gene family. Labels are the same as panel (D).