PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Optimizing Production of Antigens and Fabs in the Context of Generating Recombinant Antibodies to Human Proteins.

  • Nan Zhong,
  • Peter Loppnau,
  • Alma Seitova,
  • Mani Ravichandran,
  • Maria Fenner,
  • Harshika Jain,
  • Anandi Bhattacharya,
  • Ashley Hutchinson,
  • Marcin Paduch,
  • Vincent Lu,
  • Michal Olszewski,
  • Anthony A Kossiakoff,
  • Evan Dowdell,
  • Akiko Koide,
  • Shohei Koide,
  • Haiming Huang,
  • Vincent Nadeem,
  • Sachdev S Sidhu,
  • Jack F Greenblatt,
  • Edyta Marcon,
  • Cheryl H Arrowsmith,
  • Aled M Edwards,
  • Susanne Gräslund

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. e0139695

Abstract

Read online

We developed and optimized a high-throughput project workflow to generate renewable recombinant antibodies to human proteins involved in epigenetic signalling. Three different strategies to produce phage display compatible protein antigens in bacterial systems were compared, and we found that in vivo biotinylation through the use of an Avi tag was the most productive method. Phage display selections were performed on 265 in vivo biotinylated antigen domains. High-affinity Fabs (<20nM) were obtained for 196. We constructed and optimized a new expression vector to produce in vivo biotinylated Fabs in E. coli. This increased average yields up to 10-fold, with an average yield of 4 mg/L. For 118 antigens, we identified Fabs that could immunoprecipitate their full-length endogenous targets from mammalian cell lysates. One Fab for each antigen was converted to a recombinant IgG and produced in mammalian cells, with an average yield of 15 mg/L. In summary, we have optimized each step of the pipeline to produce recombinant antibodies, significantly increasing both efficiency and yield, and also showed that these Fabs and IgGs can be generally useful for chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) protocols.