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Protein Engineering, Design and SelectionVolume 21, Issue 8, August 2008, Pages 485-493

In vitro evolution of an antibody fragment population to find high-affinity hapten binders(Article)

  • aDepartment of Immunotechnology, Lund University, BMC D13, SE-221 84, Lund, Sweden
  • bBioInvent International AB, Sölvegatan 41, SE-223 70, Lund, Sweden

Abstract

Recently, we constructed a focused antibody library tailored to interact with haptens. High functionality of this library was demonstrated, as specific binders could be retrieved to a range of different haptens. In the current study we have developed a mutagenesis and selection strategy in order to further fine-tune the hapten binding properties of these antibody fragments. Testosterone was chosen as model antigen for the investigation. A population, rather than a single clone, originating from this focused library and enriched for testosterone binders, was subjected to random mutagenesis and different phage display selection strategies of various stringencies. These included consecutively lowering the antigen concentration and having, or not having, soluble hapten present during the phage capture and elution steps. The different selection procedures resulted in a considerable increase in apparent affinities for several of the selected populations, from which the highest affinity antibody isolated had a KD of 2 nM, corresponding to an ∼200-fold affinity improvement compared with the best clone of the starting population. Importantly, the polyclonal nature of the starting material allowed for the identification of novel unrelated variants that differed in fine-specificity, demonstrating that this approach is valuable for exploring different parts of structure space. © The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.

Author keywords

Affinity maturationAntibody libraryHaptenPhage displayTestosterone

Indexed keywords

Engineering uncontrolled termsAntibody fragmentsAntibody librariesBinding propertiesConcentration (composition)In vitro evolutionPhage displaysRandom mutagenesisSelection proceduresSelection strategiesSingle cloneTestosterone (T)
Engineering controlled terms:BindersBinding energyCloningConcentration (process)Mutagenesis
Engineering main heading:Antigens
EMTREE drug terms:haptentestosterone
EMTREE medical terms:antibody affinityantibody combining siteantibody engineeringantibody isolationantibody libraryantibody specificityantibody structureantigen antibody reactionantigen bindingarticlebacterial infectionbacteriophageclonal variationcompetitive inhibitionenzyme linked immunosorbent assayin vitro studymolecular cloningnonhumannucleotide sequencephage displaypriority journalsequence analysissite directed mutagenesis
MeSH:Antibody AffinityDirected Molecular EvolutionHaptensImmunoglobulin FragmentsPeptide LibraryTestosterone

Molecular Sequence Numbers:

GENBANK,

DQ250208(referenced), DQ250223(referenced), EU09563341(referenced)

Chemicals and CAS Registry Numbers:

testosterone, 58-22-0;

Haptens; Immunoglobulin Fragments; Peptide Library; Testosterone, 58-22-0

Funding details

Funding numberFunding sponsorAcronymFunding opportunities
VetenskapsrådetVR
2006-5446VetenskapsrådetVR
  • 1

    We gratefully acknowledge financial support from BioInvent International AB and the Swedish Research Council.

  • 2

    BioInvent International AB; the Swedish Research Council (grant number 2006-5446).

  • ISSN: 17410126
  • CODEN: PEDSB
  • Source Type: Journal
  • Original language: English
  • DOI: 10.1093/protein/gzn024
  • PubMed ID: 18480091
  • Document Type: Article

  Ohlin, M.; Department of Immunotechnology, Lund University, BMC D13, Sweden;
© Copyright 2009 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved. © MEDLINE® is the source for the MeSH terms of this document.

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