In the broadest sense there are no longer any technical limitations to making human mAbs. Biological issues involving the type and nature of either a synthetic or a natural antibody, advantages of various B cell immunological compartments, and various assays needed to qualitate and quanti ...
One of the major reasons for seeking human monoclonal antibodies has been to eliminate immunogenicity seen with rodent antibodies. Thus far, there has yet been no approach which absolutely abolishes that risk for cell-binding antibodies. In this short article, I draw attention to classic ...
Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) is used successfully for therapy of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, especially in cases of conventional therapy resistance. Within the broad spectrum of immunomodulatory activities of IVIG in vitro and in vivo, the anti-idiotypic acti ...
This chapter summarizes the most common chromatographic mAb and mAb fragment purification methods, starting by elucidating the relevant properties of the compounds and introducing the various chromatography modes that are available and useful for this application. A focus is put on ...
The use of radionuclide labels allows to study the pharmacokinetics of monoclonal antibodies, to control the specificity of their targeting and to monitor the response to an antibody treatment with high accuracy. Selection of label depends on the processing of an antibody after binding to an ...
Human monoclonal antibody has great potential for treatment of various diseases utilizing their specificity against antigens. We have shown an in vitro immunization (IVI) protocol inducing antigen-specific immune responses in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM ...
During the last 15 years in vitro technologies opened powerful routes to combine the generation of large libraries together with fast selection procedures to identify lead candidates. One of the commonest methods is based on the use filamentous phages. Antibodies (Abs) can be displayed su ...
Due to the difficulties found when generating fully human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) by the traditional method, several efforts have attempted to overcome these problems, with varying levels of success. One approach has been the development of transgenic mice carrying immunoglo ...
Antibody phage display is the most commonly used in vitro selection technology and has yielded thousands of useful antibodies for research, diagnostics, and therapy. The prerequisite for successful generation and development of human recombinant antibodies using phage display ...
In recent years, both laboratory and clinical studies have demonstrated that bispecific antibodies (BsAbs) may have significant potential application in cancer therapy either by targeting tumor cells with cytotoxic agents including effector cells, radionuclides, drugs, and ...
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are currently the fastest growing class of therapeutic proteins. Parallel to full-length IgG format the development of recombinant technologies provided the production of smaller recombinant antibody variants. The single-chain variable fra ...
Immunoassays employed at the point-of-care (POC) are often useful for diagnosing acute infections. Many of these assays rely on identification of microbial antigens that are secreted or shed during infection. However, determining which microbial antigens are best to target by immuno ...
The structure and antigenicity of protein antigens of the influenza virus are screened in a single step employing an immunoproteomics approach. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) coupled to gel electrophoresis is used both to identify vir ...
Polyclonal antibodies including purified antibody fractions and animal or human antisera may react with unknown antigens or antigens other than their main specificity in reactions that are best visualized by gel electroimmunoprecipitation methods, e.g., when analyzing compl ...
Bacterial surface proteins are often investigated as potential vaccine candidates and biomarkers of virulence. In this chapter, a novel method for identifying bacterial surface proteins is presented, which combines immunoproteomic with immunoserologic techniques. Immu ...
The study of the humoral response to infectious diseases and chronic diseases, such as cancer, is important for many reasons, including understanding the host response to disease, identification of protective antigens, vaccine development, and discovery of biomarkers for early dia ...
In the last two decades phage display technology has been used for investigating complex biological processes and isolating molecules of practical value in several applications. Bacteriophage lambda, representing a classical cloning and expression system, has also been explo ...
Serological analysis of recombinant cDNA expression libraries (SEREX) allows systematic identification of antigens recognized by the spontaneous autoantibody repertoire of patients with cancer and autoimmune disease. SEREX is based on screening of lambda phage expressi ...
The varied landscape of the adaptive immune response is determined by the peptides presented by immune cells, derived from viral or microbial pathogens or cancerous cells. The study of immune biomarkers or antigens is not new and classical methods such as agglutination, enzyme-linked imm ...
The underlying drivers of scientific processes have been rapidly evolving, but the ever-present need for research funding is typically foremost amongst these. Successful laboratories are embracing this reality by making certain that their projects have commercial value right f ...