Automated pipeline for rapid production and screening of HIV‐specific monoclonal antibodies using pichia pastoris

Kartik Shah(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), John J. Clark(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Brittany A. Goods(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Timothy J. Politano(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nicholas J. Mozdzierz(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Ross M. Zimnisky(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Rachel Leeson(Massachusetts Institute of Technology), J. Christopher Love(IIT@MIT), Kerry R. Love(IIT@MIT)
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
June 1, 2015
Cited by 14Open Access
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Abstract

Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) that bind and neutralize human pathogens have great therapeutic potential. Advances in automated screening and liquid handling have resulted in the ability to discover antigen-specific antibodies either directly from human blood or from various combinatorial libraries (phage, bacteria, or yeast). There remain, however, bottlenecks in the cloning, expression and evaluation of such lead antibodies identified in primary screens that hinder high-throughput screening. As such, "hit-to-lead identification" remains both expensive and time-consuming. By combining the advantages of overlap extension PCR (OE-PCR) and a genetically stable yet easily manipulatable microbial expression host Pichia pastoris, we have developed an automated pipeline for the rapid production and screening of full-length antigen-specific mAbs. Here, we demonstrate the speed, feasibility and cost-effectiveness of our approach by generating several broadly neutralizing antibodies against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).


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