| Literature DB >> 30076531 |
Christian Schröter1, Jan Beck2,3, Simon Krah3, Stefan Zielonka3, Achim Doerner3, Laura Rhiel1, Ralf Günther3, Lars Toleikis3, Harald Kolmar2, Björn Hock1, Stefan Becker4.
Abstract
In this study, we present a multiparameter screening procedure for the identification of target-specific antibodies with prescribed properties. Based on B cell receptor gene repertoires from transgenic rats, yeast surface display libraries were generated, and high-affinity human antibodies were readily isolated. We demonstrate that specific desirable features, i.e., species' cross-reactivity and a broad epitope coverage can be integrated into the screening procedure using high-throughput fluorescence-activated cell sorting. We show that the applied screening stringencies translate directly into binding properties of isolated human antibody variants.Entities:
Keywords: Affinity; Combinatorial immune libraries; Fab display; Fluorescence-activated cell sorting; Specificity; Yeast surface display
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30076531 PMCID: PMC6132741 DOI: 10.1007/s12033-018-0109-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biotechnol ISSN: 1073-6085 Impact factor: 2.695
Fig. 2Selection process of libraries generated from lymph node cells of h-RTK-immunized kappa OmniRats™. Bivariate plots of yeast-cells labeled with biotinylated h-RTK–ECD–His, SA-Alexa Fluor 647 (antigen binding) and anti-kappa R-PE for detection of surface expression (display) during round I and II. After round II, cells were double labeled with h-RTK–ECD–His and m-RTK–ECD–His to identify clones exhibiting simultaneous binding to both proteins. After round III, h-RTK subdomain-specific cells were selected by applying two different gates (R1: h-RTK-Domain-A; R2: h-RTK-Domain-B). Yeast cells were coincubated with RTK-Domain-AB (biotinylated) and RTK-Domain-BC (Alexa Fluor 647) subdomains of h-RTK, followed by secondary labeling with SA-PE
Fig. 1Schematic representation of antibody Fab fragment display on the surface of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of recombinantly expressed human- and murine-receptor tyrosine kinase protein (RTK) antigens. Monomeric human (h-RTK–ECD–His) and murine (m-RTK–ECD–His) RTK extracellular domains (ECDs) harbor three subdomains that can be distinguished in domains A (blue), B (green), and C (orange), further separated by four spacer regions, respectively. The ECD is fused on its C-terminus to a hexahistidine-tag for protein purification. Two additional fusion proteins were expressed, so that constant domains CH2–CH3 of human IgG1-Fc were fused to ECD fragments comprising either domains A and B or domains B and C. Both CH2–CH3 fusion proteins assemble into homodimeric molecules connected by two interchain disulfide bonds. (Color figure online)
Fig. 4Characterization of selected kappa RTK library variants as full-length antibodies. a Cellular binding of selected antibodies was measured by flow cytometry using h-RTK-expressing cancer cell line MDA-MB231 and h-RTK-negative MCF-7 cells. b Binding profiles to recombinant h-RTK–ECD–His and m-RTK–ECD–His measured by BLI. c Epitope binning analysis of selected antibodies was carried out by ELISA using recombinant h-RTK to determine if antibody variants bind to different epitopes on h-RTK. Antibodies were bound to well surfaces, followed by application of preincubated antibody h-RTK–ECD–His samples (87 and 16 nM, respectively) and detection of bound RTK-ECD-His by anti-His antibody. Binding signals are indicated by colors: blue (high binding, OD450 < 0.5), yellow (weak binding, OD450 0.01–0.5), and orange (no binding, OD450 > 0.01). Putative subdomain specificities for antibodies derived from the round 4 sorting gates R1 (RTK-Domain-A sort) and R2 (RTK-Domain-B sort) are indicated. Moreover, affinities to hRTK measured by BLI are shown. (Color figure online)