期刊论文详细信息
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Phage Display Approaches for the Isolation of Monoclonal Antibodies Against Dengue Virus Envelope Domain III from Human and Mouse Derived Libraries
Nicole J. Moreland2  Patricia Susanto2  Elfin Lim2  Moon Y. F. Tay2  Ravikumar Rajamanonmani2  Brendon J. Hanson1 
[1] Defence Medical and Environmental Research Institute, DSO National Laboratories, Singapore; E-Mail:;Duke-NUS Graduate Medical School, 8 College rd, Singapore; E-Mails:
关键词: dengue;    E protein;    domain III;    phage display;    Fab;    hybridoma;   
DOI  :  10.3390/ijms13032618
来源: mdpi
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Domain III of the dengue virus envelope protein (EDIII, aa295-395) has an immunoglobulin fold and is the proposed receptor-binding domain of the virus. Previous studies have shown that monoclonal antibodies against EDIII can be neutralizing and have therapeutic potential. Here, cloned Fab-phage libraries of human and mouse origin were screened for DENV specific antibodies. Firstly, bacterially expressed EDIII or whole virus particles were used as bait in biopanning against a large naïve human Fab-phage library (>10 billion independent clones). Multiple panning strategies were employed, and in excess of 1000 clones were screened, but all of the antibodies identified bound the envelope in regions outside EDIII suggesting EDIII antibodies are virtually absent from the naïve human repertoire. Next, a chimeric Fab-phage library was constructed from a panel of EDIII specific mouse hybridomas by pooling the VH and VL chain sequences from the hybridomas and cloning these into the pComb3X phagemid vector with human CH and CL encoding sequences. Biopanning against EDIII identified a unique antibody (C9) that cross-reacts with EDIII from DENV1-3 and, in the IgG format, binds and neutralizes DENV2 in cell-based assays. Sequence analysis and saturation mutagenesis of complementary determining regions (CDR) in the C9 light chain suggest an antigen recognition model in which the LCDR3 is a key determinant of EDIII specificity, while modifications in LCDR1 and LCDR2 affect DENV serotype cross-reactivity. Overall, this study supports the current prevailing opinion that neutralizing anti-EDIII monoclonal antibodies can be readily generated in murine systems, but in humans the anti-DENV immune response is directed away from domain III.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© 2012 by the authors; licensee Molecular Diversity Preservation International, Basel, Switzerland.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
RO202003190045846ZK.pdf 628KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:5次 浏览次数:15次