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Kevin Stuart Johnson

Bio: Kevin Stuart Johnson is an academic researcher from Medical Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Phage display & Antibody. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 32 publications receiving 7200 citations.
Topics: Phage display, Antibody, Antigen, Phagemid, Epitope

Papers
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Patent
10 Jul 1991
TL;DR: In this paper, a member of a specific binding pair (sbp) is identified by expressing DNA encoding a genetically diverse population of such sbp members in recombinant host cells in which the sbps members are displayed in functional form at the surface of a secreted recombinant genetic display package (rgdp) containing DNA encoding the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof.
Abstract: A member of a specific binding pair (sbp) is identified by expressing DNA encoding a genetically diverse population of such sbp members in recombinant host cells in which the sbp members are displayed in functional form at the surface of a secreted recombinant genetic display package (rgdp) containing DNA encoding the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof, by virtue of the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof being expressed as a fusion with a capsid component of the rgdp. The displayed sbps may be selected by affinity with a complementary sbp member, and the DNA recovered from selected rgdps for expression of the selected sbp members. Antibody sbp members may be thus obtained, with the different chains thereof expressed, one fused to the capsid component and the other in free form for association with the fusion partner polypeptide. A phagemid may be used as an expression vector, with said capsid fusion helping to package the phagemid DNA. Using this method libraries of DNA encoding respective chains of such multimeric sbp members may be combined, thereby obtaining a much greater genetic diversity in the sbp members than could easily be obtained by conventional methods.

2,740 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work shows that conventional hybridoma technology may be superseded by large phage libraries that are proving to be a stable and reliable source of specific, high affinity human monoclonal antibodies.
Abstract: To generate a stable resource from which high affinity human antibodies to any given antigen can be rapidly isolated, functional V-gene segments from 43 non-immunized human donors were used to construct a repertoire of 1.4 x 10(10) single-chain Fv (scFv) fragments displayed on the surface of phage. Fragments were cloned in a phagemid vector, enabling both phage displayed and soluble scFv to be produced without subcloning. A hexahistidine tag has been incorporated to allow rapid purification of scFv by nickel chelate chromatography. This library format reduces the time needed to isolate monoclonal antibody fragments to under two weeks. All of the measured binding affinities show a Kd < 10 nM and off-rates of 10(-3) to 10(-4) s-1, properties usually associated with antibodies from a secondary immune response. The best of these scFvs, an anti-fluorescein antibody (0.3 nM) and an antibody directed against the hapten DTPA (0.8 nM), are the first antibodies with subnanomolar binding affinities to be isolated from a naive library. Antibodies to doxorubicin, which is both immunosuppressive and toxic, as well as a high affinity and high specificity antibody to the steroid hormone oestradiol have been isolated. This work shows that conventional hybridoma technology may be superseded by large phage libraries that are proving to be a stable and reliable source of specific, high affinity human monoclonal antibodies.

1,409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Heterodimeric Fab fragments can be assembled on the surface of the phages by linking one chain to the phage coat protein, and secreting the other into the bacterial periplasm by introducing an amber mutation.
Abstract: The display of proteins on the surface of phage offers a powerful means of selecting for rare genes encoding proteins with binding activities. Recently we found that antibody heavy and light chain variable (V) domains fused as a single polypeptide chain to a minor coat protein of filamentous phage fd, could be enriched by successive rounds of phage growth and panning with antigen. This allows the selection of antigen-binding domains directly from diverse libraries of V-genes. Now we show that heterodimeric Fab fragments can be assembled on the surface of the phage by linking one chain to the phage coat protein, and secreting the other into the bacterial periplasm. Furthermore by introducing an amber mutation between the antibody chain and the coat protein, we can either display the antibody on phage using supE strains of bacteria, or produce soluble Fab fragment using non-suppressor strains. The use of Fab fragments may offer advantages over single chain Fv fragments for construction of combinatorial libraries.

1,354 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A model system, involving the lox-Cre site-specific recombination system of bacteriophage PI, to lock together the heavy and light chain genes from two different replicons within an infected bacterium is described.
Abstract: Antibody fragments, comprising paired heavy (VH) and light (VL) chain variable domains, can be displayed on the surface of filamentous bacteriophage, and rare phage (encoding antigen binding activities) selected by binding to antigen (1). The process mimics immune selection and has been used to make human antibody fragments in bacteria, without immunisation, by random combinatorial linkage (2) of diverse repertoires of VH and VL genes from lymphocytes (3, 4). Fragments with a range of binding specificities have been isolated with binding affinities in the range 10 M~'-10 M\" (for reviews see (5, 6)). However larger 'primary' repertoires of phage antibodies should allow higher affinity fragments to be isolated (7, 8). The size of phage antibody repertoires (10) is limited by the efficiency of transformation of E.coli. In principle, larger repertoires could be made by combinatorial infection, for example by transforming E. coli with a repertoire of heavy chains (encoded on plasmids) then infecting with a repertoire of light chains (encoded on phage) (9). Since infection is extremely efficient, and most E.coli cells in an exponential culture can be infected, the combinatorial diversity of Fab fragments displayed on phage could be as large as the number of E.coli in culture (10 per litre). However the heavy and light chain genes would not be packaged together within the same phage particle, and so could not be simultaneously co-selected. Here we describe a model system, involving the lox-Cre site-specific recombination system of bacteriophage PI, to lock together the heavy and light chain genes from two different replicons within an infected bacterium.

406 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that phage display can be used to tailor the properties of a therapeutic monoclonal antibody in a predefined fashion, and the mechanism of improvement may be one of alternation of loop conformation.

271 citations


Cited by
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Patent
28 Aug 1991
TL;DR: In this paper, a transgenic non-human animals capable of producing heterologous antibodies and methods for producing human sequence antibodies which bind to human antigens with substantial affinity are described.
Abstract: The invention relates to transgenic non-human animals capable of producing heterologous antibodies and methods for producing human sequence antibodies which bind to human antigens with substantial affinity.

3,143 citations

Patent
29 Jun 2001
TL;DR: In this article, a structural signal called for the display of the protein on the outer surface of a chosen bacterial cell, bacterial spore or phage (genetic package) is introduced into a genetic package.
Abstract: In order to obtain a novel binding protein against a chosen target, DNA molecules, each encoding a protein comprising one of a family of similar potential binding domains and a structural signal calling for the display of the protein on the outer surface of a chosen bacterial cell, bacterial spore or phage (genetic package) are introduced into a genetic package. The protein is expressed and the potential binding domain is displayed on the outer surface of the package. The cells or viruses bearing the binding domains which recognize the target molecule are isolated and amplified. The successful binding domains are then characterized. One or more of these successful binding domains is used as a model for the design of a new family of potential binding domains, and the process is repeated until a novel binding domain having a desired affinity for the target molecule is obtained. In one embodiment, the first family of potential binding domains is related to bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, the genetic package is M13 phage, and the protein includes the outer surface transport signal of the M13 gene III protein.

3,093 citations

Patent
10 Jul 1991
TL;DR: In this paper, a member of a specific binding pair (sbp) is identified by expressing DNA encoding a genetically diverse population of such sbp members in recombinant host cells in which the sbps members are displayed in functional form at the surface of a secreted recombinant genetic display package (rgdp) containing DNA encoding the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof.
Abstract: A member of a specific binding pair (sbp) is identified by expressing DNA encoding a genetically diverse population of such sbp members in recombinant host cells in which the sbp members are displayed in functional form at the surface of a secreted recombinant genetic display package (rgdp) containing DNA encoding the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof, by virtue of the sbp member or a polypeptide component thereof being expressed as a fusion with a capsid component of the rgdp. The displayed sbps may be selected by affinity with a complementary sbp member, and the DNA recovered from selected rgdps for expression of the selected sbp members. Antibody sbp members may be thus obtained, with the different chains thereof expressed, one fused to the capsid component and the other in free form for association with the fusion partner polypeptide. A phagemid may be used as an expression vector, with said capsid fusion helping to package the phagemid DNA. Using this method libraries of DNA encoding respective chains of such multimeric sbp members may be combined, thereby obtaining a much greater genetic diversity in the sbp members than could easily be obtained by conventional methods.

2,740 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that a single large phage display library can be used to isolate human antibodies against any antigen, by-passing both hybridoma technology and immunization.

2,678 citations

Patent
23 Sep 1992
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe methods for the production of antibodies, or antibody fragments, which have the same binding specificity as a parent antibody, but which have increased human characteristics.
Abstract: Methods are disclosed which may be used for the production of antibodies, or antibody fragments, which have the same binding specificity as a parent antibody but which have increased human characteristics. Humanised antibodies may be obtained by chain shuffling, perhaps using phage display technology. In one embodiment, a polypeptide comprising a heavy or light chain variable domain of a non-human antibody specific for an antigen of interest is combined with a repertoire of human complementary (light or heavy) chain variable domains. Hybrid pairings which are specific for the antigen of interest are selected. Human chains from the selected pairings may then be combined with a repertoire of human complementary variable domains (heavy or light) and humanised antibody polypeptide dimers can then be selected for binding specificity for antigen. The methods may be combined with CDR-imprinting. In another embodiment, component part of an antigen-binding site of a non-human antibody known to bind a particular antigen is combined with a repertoire of component parts of an antigen-binding site of human antibody, forming a library of antibody polypeptide dimers with antigen-binding sites. Hybrids selected from this library may be used in a second humanising shuffling step, or may already be of sufficient human character to be of value, perhaps after some modification to increase human character still further.

2,228 citations