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de | fr | en print view 3R-INFO-BULLETIN 5 - August 1995Dr. Monique Vogel, senior investigator in this 3R-project.
Contact address: Phone: 031-632 3521 Human recombinant antibodiesValuable research toolsHow do you make an infinite number of different molecules out of a finite number of building blocks? This is one of the tasks of the immune system to construct antibodies that can recognize every possible foreign micro-organism that might enter the body, and thus mediate an immune response against the intruder. The immune system solves this problem by combining several highly variable structural elements (similar to a locksmith combining bolts and pins to make a unique lock) with a few standard elements ("lock") to make approx. 109 variations, each of which reacts with unique specificity and sensitivity to a particular antigen ("key").
Immune antibody librariesThe research group under Prof. Beda M. Stadler at the Institute of Immunology and Allergology, University of Bern, has chosen a different approach: in a project supported by the Foundation Research 3R, they are using recombinant DNA techniques to try to make the use of animals in obtaining antibodies obsolete [1 ,2]. The researchers take advantage of the antibodies' genetic structural elements in their work and make use of such powerful molecular biological techniques as the polymerase chain reaction. Known regions at either end of the antibody genes were used as primers for the polymerase chain reaction, and the antibody genes were thus selectively amplified to generate an "immune library" from an immunized human blood donor. Genes which encoded for antibodies that were circulating in the blood could be isolated with this method. However, it was not possible to find antibody genes specific for antigens which the donor had never encountered. Thus with this technique [3], just as in the case of the animals, it would be necessary to immunize the donors in order to create recombinant antibodies! Synthetic librariesOther research groups have taken a radically different approach, but one that also takes advantage of the standard and variable structural elements of antibodies: they have synthesized their own unique "locks" by generating random variable sequences artificially [4]. From such "synthetic" antibody libraries numerous antibody specifities have been isolated including antibodies against HIV, demonstrating that it may even become obsolete to immunize an individual. "Panning for gold"Thus naive (from nonimmunized donors) or immune libraries consisting of ~108, or synthetic libraries consisting of ~1011 different antibodies already exist [1-4]. But, how does the immunologist find the one antibody with the relevant specificity amongst the vast collection? This represents a task like finding a needle in the haystack! The answer lies in another technical breakthrough, namely the use of bacteriophages [3]. These are viruses that can be propagated in bacterial hosts. The genes encoding for the variable region of each antibody are inserted into the DNA of a phage in such a way that the translated antibody protein is expressed on the phage's outer surface. If the antibody is functional, then the phage can be regarded as one large "pseudoantibody".
Medical applications of recombinant antibodiesDr. Vogel, the senior investigator in this 3R supported project, has used this technique to isolate autoantibodies against human IgE [1] a molecule associated with allergies or against Tetanus toxin [2]. In the future, such recombinant antibodies may form the basis for the treatment of autoimmune diseases. But there remains a long way to go; at present, the molecules are only fragments containing the variable regions of the antibody. For human therapy the entire antibody molecule, including the constant regions, will have to be constructed and inserted into a suitable vector to be grown in large quantities in a fermentor. The methods described above are considerably more sophisticated than the standard method of injecting a rabbit with antigen and isolating its antibodies. They also require a certain familiarity with molecular biology techniques. Nevertheless it is hoped that these synthetic antibody libraries will provide a universal tool that will truly make the use of animals for producing antibodies obsolete in the future. It remains to be seen how quickly this technological "revolution" will come about. References
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