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Combinatorial infection and in vivo recombination: a strategy for making large phage antibody repertoires.

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TLDR
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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

DNA shuffling by random fragmentation and reassembly: in vitro recombination for molecular evolution.

TL;DR: A method for the reassembly of genes from their random DNA fragments, resulting in in vitro recombination is reported, and mixtures of synthetic oligonucleotides and PCR fragments can be mixed into a gene at defined positions based on homology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human antibodies with sub-nanomolar affinities isolated from a large non-immunized phage display library.

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.
Patent

Production of anti-self antibodies from antibody segment repertoires and displayed on phage

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors described methods for the production of anti-self antibodies and antibody fragments, being antibodies or fragments of a particular species of mammal which bind self-antigens of that species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Isolation of high affinity human antibodies directly from large synthetic repertoires.

TL;DR: This work created highly diverse repertoires of heavy and light chains entirely in vitro from a bank of human V gene segments and generated a large synthetic repertoire of Fab fragments displayed on filamentous phage to help dissect the contributions of biological mechanisms and structural features governing V gene usage in vivo.
Patent

Methods of Modifying Eukaryotic Cells

TL;DR: In this article, a method for replacing an endogenous immunoglobulin gene locus of the variable region as a whole against a orthologous human locus, or partially by replacement of one or more V and J, or V, D and J gene segments thereof, was proposed.
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