We describe a method for the production of human antibodies specific for an antigen of interest, starting from rare B cells circulating in human blood. Generation of these natural antibodies is efficient and rapid, and the antibodies obtained can discriminate between highly related antigens.
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) are powerful tools useful for both fundamental research and in biomedicine. Their high specificity is indispensable when the antibody needs to distinguish between highly related structures (e.g., a normal protein and a mutated version thereof). The current way of generating such discriminative mAbs involves extensive screening of multiple Ab-producing B cells, which is both costly and time consuming. We propose here a rapid and cost-effective method for the generation of discriminative, fully human mAbs starting from human blood circulating B lymphocytes. The originality of this strategy is due to the selection of specific antigen binding B cells combined with the counter-selection of all other cells, using readily available Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC). Once specific B cells are isolated, cDNA (complementary deoxyribonucleic acid) sequences coding for the corresponding mAb are obtained using single cell Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) technology and subsequently expressed in human cells. Within as little as 1 month, it is possible to produce milligrams of highly discriminative human mAbs directed against virtually any desired antigen naturally detected by the B cell repertoire.
The method described here allows the rapid and versatile production of fully human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against a desired antigen (Ag). mAbs are essential tools in many fundamental research applications in vitro and in vivo: flow cytometry, histology, western-blotting, and blocking experiments for example. Furthermore, mAbs are being used more and more in medicine to treat autoimmune diseases, cancer, and to control transplantation rejection1. For example, anti-CTLA-4 and anti-PD-1 (or anti-PD-L1) mAbs were recently used as immune checkpoint inhibitors in cancer treatments2.
The first mAbs were produced by immunoglobulin (Ig)-secreting hybridomas obtained from the splenic cells of immunized mice or rats. However, the strong immune response against murine or rat mAbs hampers their therapeutic use in humans, due to their rapid clearance and the probable induction of hypersensitivity reactions3. To tackle this problem, animal protein sequences of mAbs have been partially replaced by human ones to generate so-called chimeric mouse-human or humanized antibodies. However, this strategy only partially decreases immunogenicity, while substantially increasing both the cost and the time-scale of production. A better solution is to generate human mAbs directly from human B cells and several strategies for this are available. One of them is the use of phage or yeast display. This involves displaying variable domains from a combinatorial library of random human Ig heavy and light chains on phages or yeasts, and carrying out a selection step using the specific antigen of interest. A major drawback of this strategy is that heavy and light chains are randomly associated, leading to a very large increase in the diversity of generated antibodies. Antibodies obtained are unlikely to correspond to those that would arise from a natural immune response against a particular Ag. Moreover, human protein folding and post-translational modifications are not systematically reproduced in prokaryotes or even in yeasts. A second human mAb production method is the immortalization of natural human B cells, by Epstein-Barr virus infection or expression of the anti-apoptotic factors BCL-6 and BCL-XL4. However, this method is applicable only to memory B cells and is inefficient, requiring screening of numerous mAb-producing immortalized B cells to identify the few (if any) mAb clones with the desired antigenic specificity. The method is thus both costly and time consuming.
A new protocol has recently been described for production of human mAbs from isolated single B cells5. It relies on an optimized single-cell Reverse Transcription-Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) for amplification of both the heavy- and light-chain encoding segments from a single sorted B cell. This is followed by the cloning and expression of these segments in a eukaryotic expression system, thus allowing reconstruction of a fully human mAb. This protocol has been used successfully starting from B cells from vaccinated donors. Cells were harvested several weeks after vaccination to obtain higher frequencies of B cells directed against the desired Ag, and thus limit the time required for screening6. Other fully human mAbs have also been produced from HIV+ (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) infected patients7 and melanoma patients8. Despite these advances, there is still no procedure available that enables the isolation of Ag-specific B cells independent of their memory phenotype or frequency.
The procedure described here leads to efficient ex vivo isolation of human circulating B cells based on their BCR specificity, followed by the production of fully human antigen-specific mAbs in high yield and with a low screening time. The method is not restricted to memory B cells or antibody-secreting B cells induced after an immune response, but can also be applied to the human naïve B cell repertoire. That it works even starting from Ag-specific B cells present at very low frequencies is a good indication of its efficiency. The principle of the method is as follows: Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) are stained with two tetramers presenting the antigen of interest, each labeled with a different fluorochrome (e.g., Phycoerythrin (PE) and Allophycocyanin (APC)), and a third tetramer presenting a closely related antigen conjugated with a third fluorochrome (e.g., Brillant Violet 421 (BV421)). To enrich for antigen-binding cells, cells are then incubated with beads coated with anti-PE and anti-APC Abs, and sorted in cell separation columns. The PE+ APC+ cell fraction is selected, stained with a variety of mAbs specific for different PBMC cell types to permit identification of B cells, and subjected to flow cytometry cell sorting. B cells which are PE+ and APC+, but Brilliant Violet–, are isolated. This step counter-selects cells which are not B cells or do not bind to the tetramerized antigen, but do bind to either PE or APC (these cells will be PE+ APC– or PE– APC+) or to the non-antigen part of the tetramers used (these cells will be BV421+). B cells not highly specific for the epitope of interest are also counter-selected at this step (these cells will also be BV421+). Thus, this method can purify highly specific B cells expressing B-cell Receptors (BCRs) able to discriminate between two very closely related antigens. Single specific B cells are collected in tubes and their PCR-amplified Ig cDNAs (complementary deoxyribonucleic acids) cloned and expressed by a human cell line as secreted IgG mAbs.
As a proof of concept, this study describes the efficient generation of human mAbs, which recognize a peptide presented by a major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecule and can discriminate between this peptide and other peptides loaded on the same MHC-I allele. Although the level of complexity of this Ag is important, this method allows (i) high yield recovery of Ag-specific mAbs; (ii) production of mAbs able to discriminate between two structurally close Ags. This approach can be extended to vaccinated or infected patients without any protocol modification, and has also already been successfully implemented in a humanized rat system9. Thus, this study describes a versatile and efficient approach to generate fully human mAbs that can be used in basic research and immunotherapy.
All human peripheral blood samples were obtained from anonymous adult donors after informed consent, in accordance with the local ethics committee (Etablissement Français du Sang, EFS, Nantes, procedure PLER NTS-2016-08).
1. Isolation of Human Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells
NOTE: Starting material can be total human peripheral blood or cytapheresis samples. Samples should not be older than 8 h and supplemented with anticoagulants (e.g., heparin).
2. Tetramer-associated Magnetic Enrichment of Ag-specific B Cells
3. Staining of Ag-specific Human B Cells and Cell Sorting
4. Single Cell RT-PCR
5. Expression Cloning
6. Production of mAbs
Starting from PBMC from healthy donors, this project presents the generation of human mAbs, which recognize the peptide Pp65495 (Pp65, from human cytomegalovirus) presented by the major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecule HLA-A*0201 (HLA-A2). These mAbs can discriminate between this complex and complexes representing other peptides loaded onto the same MHC-I molecule.
PBMC were stained with HLA-A2/Pp65-PE, HLA-A2/Pp65-APC, and HLA-A2/MelA2-BV421 tetramers as described in the above protocol. After immunomagnetic cell enrichment of PE- and APC-tetramer positive cells, the eluted cells were stained with additional mAbs. On the flow cytometry cell sorter, magnetically enriched cells were first gated on viable CD14–CD16–CD3–CD19+ singlets (B cells). Figure 1 shows the gating strategy used to isolate B cells expressing BCRs able to discriminate between HLA-A2/Pp65 and other related HLA-A2/peptide complexes. Selection of B cells of interest was performed after gating on HLA-A2/Pp65 PE+ and HLA-A2/Pp65 APC+ double-positives, to exclude fluorochrome specific B cells that were singly stained PE+ or APC+. Finally, highly specific B cells were identified by gating on HLA-A2/MelA2-BV421 negative cells. This allows the identification of B cells expressing BCRs able to bind HLA-A2/Pp65, in a peptide and HLA-A2-dependent manner, discriminating between these B cells and those directed against β2 microglobulin, biotin, HLA-A2, or those which do not discriminate between peptides in the MHC binding groove. All these latter cells will be BV421 positive cells. As previously shown and further documented with other types of Ag, this exclusion strategy is more important due to the increases in the discriminative ability of the B cells for the Ag9.
Once single specific B cells were sorted, cDNAs encoding for heavy and light Ig-chains were amplified by RT-PCR. Pairs of heavy and light chain coding segments were obtained in about 50% of single B cells tested (Table 1). Variable domain sequences were then cloned into expression vectors containing corresponding constant domain sequences (heavy constant 1 and light constant κ or λ). Human embryonic kidney cells (HEK, 293A cells) were cotransfected with heavy and light chain vectors. The secreted mAbs of IgG1 isotype were harvested from the culture supernatants of 293A cells 5 days after transfection (See Figure 3 for the global strategy of fully human mAbs production). This successfully produced one HLA-A2/Pp65 specific antibody starting from 3 single B lymphocyte cells yielding pairs of heavy and light chain coding segments (Table 1). ELISA assays clearly demonstrated that this mAb was both MHC- and peptide-dependent for its binding to HLA-A2/Pp65 complexes (Figure 4A), and several milligrams of mAb were readily produced for further analysis (e.g., affinity analyses, functional assays). Its binding affinity, determined by surface plasmon resonance (SPR), was about 7 x 10-6 M (Figure 4B).
Thus, this article describes a combination of sensitive and efficient methods allowing i) detection of relevant Ag-specific B cells, even when present at very low frequencies in the blood of healthy donors and ii) the generation of highly discriminative human mAbs.
Figure 1: Detection of HLA-A2/Pp65 specific B cells from human PBMC.
3 x 108 PBMC were stained with HLA-A2/Pp65-PE, HLA-A2/Pp65-APC, and HLA-A2/MelA2-BV421 tetramers. After immunomagnetic cell enrichment of PE- and APC-tetramer positive cells, the eluted cells were stained with additional mAbs. On a flow cytometry cell sorter, cells were gated first on viable singlet CD14–CD16– lymphocytes (not shown), then on CD19+CD3– cells. Then, B cells stained with both HLA-A2/Pp65-PE and HLA-A2/Pp65-APC tetramers were gated. The HLA-A2/MelA-BV421 tetramer was used to exclude B cells that did not recognize HLA-A2/Pp65, in a peptide and MHC-dependent manner.
Figure 2: Strategy for amplification and cloning of Ig genes. Light and heavy Ig-chain encoding genes were amplified by nested RT-PCR. First PCRs were performed with a mix of forward primers hybridizing the leader region and reverse primers specific for constant regions of appropriate heavy, light kappa, or light lambda chains. Second PCRs were performed with primers containing restriction sites, forward and reverse primers were respectively specific for the beginning of V segments and for the end of J segments. PCR products were sequenced, digested with restriction enzymes, and cloned in expression vectors containing appropriate constant domains. CMV: cytomegalovirus promoter; AmpR: resistance gene for ampicillin.
Figure 3: Overall strategy of reconstruction of recombinant human mAbs.
A tetramer-based sorting strategy allows detection of B cells of interest. Highly specific B cells were single-cell sorted. Light and heavy Ig-chain encoding segments were amplified using RT-PCR. Variable domain sequences were cloned into separate eukaryotic expression vectors in frame with gene segments encoding constant light and heavy regions. The corresponding fully human mAbs were expressed by transiently-transfected HEK 293A cells and purified from the culture supernatant. This figure was modified from Ouisse et al. (2017)9.
Figure 4: Characterization of a representative highly discriminative mAb against HLA-A2/Pp65 generated from human peripheral blood circulating B cells.
A) Specificity of mAb PC1.02 against HLA-A2/Pp65 tested by ELISA. Plates were coated with relevant (HLA-A2/Pp65) or irrelevant HLA-A2 complexes containing HLA-A2-restricted peptides: MelA, NS3 (HCV-1), and GagP17 (HIV-1) at 2 µg/mL, the mAb PC1.02 was added, and an anti-human IgG-HRP Ab was used for detection. Optical densities (OD) were read at 450 nm. B) Affinity determination of the mAb PC1.02 using Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) by flowing various concentrations of HLA-A2/Pp65 complexes over CM5 chip-bound mAb. This figure was modified from Ouisse et al. (2017)9.
Number of PBMC | Number of PE+ APC+ cells after enrichment | Number of excluded (BV421+) cells | Number of sorted single cells | Number of analyzed wells | Number of wells with HC and LC associated (% recovery) | Number of mAbs produced | Number of specific mAbs | |
HLA-A2/Pp65 mAb (PC1.02) | 3 x 108 | 818 | 117 | 161 | 7 | 3 (43%) | 3 | 1 |
Table 1: Analysis of HLA-A2/Pp65 specific B cells.
The impact of the exclusion strategy of unspecific B cells, the yields of Ig gene amplification, and mAb production from isolated HLA-A2/Pp65 specific B cells were evaluated/measured.
The proposed protocol is a powerful method for the generation of human mAbs directly from Ag-specific B cells circulating in the blood. It combines three important aspects: (i) the use of a tetramer-associated magnetic enrichment, which allows an ex vivo isolation of even rare Ag-binding B cells; (ii) a gating strategy that uses three Ag tetramers (two relevant ones and one irrelevant one) labelled with three different fluorochromes to isolate, by flow cytometry, only the B cells expressing a BCR specific for the desired Ag; (iii) the reconstruction of the corresponding recombinant mAb cDNAs by RT-PCR at the single cell level and expression of the cDNAs in human cells.
Previous studies proposed using one or two fluorescent relevant antigens to label human B cells before sorting and subsequent production of mAbs from the isolated B cells6,7,8. One analysis in patients with rheumatoid arthritis, and one in an autoimmune mouse model, have associated an irrelevant fluorescent antigen to characterize autoreactive B cells and determine their frequency10,11. As far as we know, use of a combination of two fluorescent relevant antigen tetramers and one irrelevant antigen tetramer has not been described previously for enrichment of specific B cells prior to their use for production of fully human mAbs. This optimized method allows fully human discriminative mAbs to be obtained in as little as a month, and can be performed successfully even when starting from a naïve B cell repertoire. Thus, it has none of the major drawbacks of phage display, human B cell immortalization, or other previously described molecular biology-based mAb reconstruction procedures.
This cell sorting strategy results in a high yield recovery of Ag-specific human mAbs. Pairs of heavy and light chain segments from single isolated B cells are amplified with a success rate of around 50%. Light chain segments are almost always amplified, but this is not the case for heavy chain segments. RT-PCR efficiency depends heavily on respecting the following points: i) sorted single B cells must be frozen as quickly as possible; ii) adding 30 units of RNase inhibitor and minimizing the time between taking the B cells out of the freezer and launching the RT reaction; iii) thawing all primers on ice; iv) never freezing/thawing primers more than three times; v) stocking primers for a maximum of one year.
Concerning the production efficiency of the corresponding recombinant mAbs with the desired specificity, it is about 30 – 40% of the case for pMHC specific mAbs. These particular mAbs have to recognize both the peptide and the MHC molecule, which is quite demanding, and we have previously shown that the overall yield of recovery of specific mAbs directed against more conventional antigens is superior, up to 100% for the β-galactosidase antigen9. It must be stressed that the choice of an appropriate Ag for the irrelevant tetramer is important to increase the specificity of the mAbs produced.
The affinity of the anti-HLA-A2/Pp65 mAb (PC1.02) described in the present article is relatively low, about 7 x 10-6 M, similar to the affinity of a TCR. This result was expected, as B cell isolation was performed from naïve donors. Most tetramer+ B cells were IgM+IgG–, which reduces the probability of obtaining good Ag-binders. Nevertheless, this method can also make possible the sorting out of cross-reactive memory B cells against a desired Ag from naïve donors, because of immunological past of individuals12. Moreover, this method is easily applicable to vaccinated or infected patients or immunized humanized animals, as described in 9, where in vivo affinity maturation can increase the affinity of resulting mAbs to about 1 x 10-9 M. Various procedures have also been described to improve the affinity of mAbs in vitro, in particular through reproducing somatic hypermutation in cells expressing the antibody (reviewed in 13).
In conclusion, we propose a versatile strategy for highly discriminative mAbs production that can be used in various types of situation, from a naïve individual to a vaccinated donor or a patient suffering from an autoimmune disease. Fully human mAbs generated in this way against a desired epitope could be useful both for basic research and immunotherapy.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank the Cytometry Facility "CytoCell" (SFR Santé, Biogenouest, Nantes) for expert technical assistance. We thank also all the staff of recombinant protein production (P2R) and of IMPACT platforms (INSERM 1232, SFR Santé, Biogenouest, Nantes) for their technical support. We thank Emmanuel Scotet and Richard Breathnach for constructive comments on the manuscript. This work was financially supported by the IHU-Cesti project funded by the « Investissements d'Avenir » French Government program, managed by the French National Research Agency (ANR) (ANR-10-IBHU-005). The IHU-Cesti project is also supported by Nantes Métropole and Région Pays de la Loire. This work was realized in the context of the LabEX IGO program supported by the National Research Agency via the investment of the future program ANR-11-LABX-0016-01.
HEK 293A cell line | Thermo Fisher scientific | R70507 | |
DMEM (1X) Dulbecco's Modified Eagle Medium | Gibco by life technologies | 21969-035 | (+) 4,5g/L D-Glucose 0,11g/L Sodium Pyruvate (-) L-Glutmine |
RPMI medium1640 (1X) | Gibco by life technologies | 31870-025 | |
Bovine Serum Albumine (BSA) | PAA | K45-001 | |
Nutridoma-SP | Roche | 11011375001 | 100X Conc |
PBS-Phosphate Buffered Saline (10X) pH 7,4 | Ambion | AM9624 | |
EDTA (Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) 0,5M pH=8 | Invitrogen by Life Technologies | 15575-020 | |
Fetal Bovine serum (FBS) | Dominique Dutscher | S1810-500 | |
Ficoll – lymphocytes separation medium | EuroBio | CMSMSL01-01 | density 1,0777+/-0,001 |
streptavidin R-phycoerythrin conjugate | Invitrogen by Life Technologies | S21388 | premiun grade 1mg/ml contains 5mM sodium azide |
Streptavidin, allophycocyanin conjugate | Invitrogen by thermoFisher scientific | S32362 | 1mg/ml 2mM azide premium grade |
Brilliant violet 421 streptavidin | Biolegend | 405225 | conc : 0,5mg/ml |
Anti-PE conjugated magnetic MicroBeads | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-048-801 | |
Anti-APC conjugated magnetic MicroBeads | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-090-855 | |
MidiMACs or QuadroMACS separotor | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-042-302/130-090-976 | |
LS Columns | Miltenyi Biotec | 130-042-401 | |
CD3 BV510 BD horizon | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 563109 | Used dilution 1:20 |
CD19 FITC | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 345788 | Used dilution 1:20 |
CD14 PerCPCy5.5 | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 561116 | Used dilution 1:50 |
CD16 PerCPCy5.5 | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 338440 | Used dilution 1:50 |
7AAD | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 51-68981E (559925) | Used dilution 1:1000 |
FACS ARIA III Cell Sorter Cytometer | BD Biosciences | ||
8-strip PCR tubes | Axygen | 321-10-061 | |
Racks for 96 microtubes | Dominique Dutscher | 45476 | |
RNAseOUT Ribonuclease Inhibitor (recombinant) | Invitrogen by thermoFisher scientific | 10777-019 | qty:5000U (40U/ul) |
Distilled Water Dnase/Rnase Free | Gibco | 10977-035 | |
Oligod(T)18 mRNA Primer | New England BioLabs | S1316S | 5.0 A260unit |
Random hexamers | Invitrogen by thermoFisher scientific | N8080127 | qty : 50uM, 5nmoles |
Superscript III Reverse transcriptase | Invitrogen by thermoFisher scientific | 18080-044 | qty : 10000U (200U/ul) |
GoTaq G2 Flexi DNA polymerase | Promega | M7805 | |
dNTP Set, Molecular biology grade | Thermo Scientific | R0182 | 4*100umol |
5LVH1 | Eurofins | ACAGGTGCCCACT CCCAGGTGCAG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers – Forward Prmers |
5LVH3 | Eurofins | AAGGTGTCCAGTG TGARGTGCAG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers – Forward Prmers |
5LVL4_6 | Eurofins | CCCAGATGGGTCC TGTCCCAGGTGCAG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers – Forward Prmers |
5LVH5 | Eurofins | CAAGGAGTCTGTT CCGAGGTGCAG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers – Forward Prmers |
3HuIgG_const_anti | Eurofins | TCTTGTCCACCTT GGTGTTGCT |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers -Reverse primers for human Ig- Bacteria PCR screening |
3CuCH1 | Eurofins | GGGAATTCTCACA GGAGACGA |
First round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Outer primers -Reverse primers for human Ig |
5AgeIVH1_5_7 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC GAGGTGCAGCTGGTGCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH3 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCT GAGGTGCAGCTGGTGGAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH3_23 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCT GAGGTGCAGCTGTTGGAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH4 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC CAGGTGCAGCTGCAGGAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH4_34 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC CAGGTGCAGCTACAGCAGTG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH1_18 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC CAGGTTCAGCTGGTGCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH1_24 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC CAGGTCCAGCTGGTACAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH3__9_30_33 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCT GAAGTGCAGCTGGTGGAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5AgeIVH6_1 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCC CAGGTACAGCTGCAGCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Forward primers |
3SalIJH1_2_4_5 | Eurofins | TGCGAAGTCGACG CTGAGGAGACGGTGACCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Reverse primers |
3SalIJH3 | Eurofins | TGCGAAGTCGACG CTGAAGAGACGGTGACCATTG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Reverse primers |
3SalIJH6 | Eurofins | TGCGAAGTCGACG CTGAGGAGACGGTGACCGTG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of heavy chains – Inner primers -Reverse primers |
5'LVk1_2 | Eurofins | ATGAGGSTCCCYG CTCAGCTGCTGG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVk3 | Eurofins | CTCTTCCTCCTGC TACTCTGGCTCCCAG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVk4 | Eurofins | ATTTCTCTGTTGC TCTGGATCTCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Outer primers -Forward primers |
3'Ck543_566 | Eurofins | GTTTCTCGTAGTC TGCTTTGCTCA |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Outer primers -Reverse primers- Bacteria PCR screening |
5'AgeIVk1 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCT GACATCCAGATGACCCAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeIVk1_9_1–13 | Eurofins | TTGTGCTGCAACCGGTGTAC ATTCAGACATCCAGTTGACCCAGTCT |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeIVk1D_43_1_8 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTGT GCCATCCGGATGACCCAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeIVk2 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATGGG GATATTGTGATGACCCAGAC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeIVk2_28_2_30 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATGGG GATATTGTGATGACTCAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeVk3_11_3D_11 | Eurofins | TTGTGCTGCAACCGGTGTAC ATTCAGAAATTGTGTTGACACAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeVk3_15_3D_15 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCA GAAATAGTGATGACGCAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeVk3_20_3D_20 | Eurofins | TTGTGCTGCAACCGGTGTAC ATTCAGAAATTGTGTTGACGCAGTCT |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeVk4_1 | Eurofins | CTGCAACCGGTGTACATTCG GACATCGTGATGACCCAGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
3'BsiWIJk1_2_4 | Eurofins | GCCACCGTACGTT TGATYTCCACCTTGGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
3'BsiWIJk3 | Eurofins | GCCACCGTACGTT TGATATCCACTTTGGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
3'BsiWIJk5 | Eurofins | GCCACCGTACGTT TAATCTCCAGTCGTGTC |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains k – Inner primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl1 | Eurofins | GGTCCTGGGCCCA GTCTGTGCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl2 | Eurofins | GGTCCTGGGCCCA GTCTGCCCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl3 | Eurofins | GCTCTGTGACCTC CTATGAGCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl4_5 | Eurofins | GGTCTCTCTCSCA GCYTGTGCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl6 | Eurofins | GTTCTTGGGCCAA TTTTATGCTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'LVl7 | Eurofins | GGTCCAATTCYCA GGCTGTGGTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5LVl8 | Eurofins | GAGTGGATTCTCA GACTGTGGTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
3'Cl | Eurofins | CACCAGTGTGGCC TTGTTGGCTTG |
First round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Outer primers -Forward primers |
5'AgeIVl1 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCCTGGGCC CAGTCTGTGCTGACKCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
5'AgeIVl2 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCCTGGGCC CAGTCTGCCCTGACTCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
5'AgeIVl3 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCTGTGACC TCCTATGAGCTGACWCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
5'AgeIVl4_5 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCTCTCTCS CAGCYTGTGCTGACTCA |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
5'AgeIVl6 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCTTGGGCC AATTTTATGCTGACTCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
5'AgeIVl8 | Eurofins | CTGCTACCGGTTCCAATTCY CAGRCTGTGGTGACYCAG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -forward primers |
3'XhoICl | Eurofins | CTCCTCACTCGAG GGYGGGAACAGAGTG |
Second round of PCR – Amplification of light chains λ – Inner primers -Reverse primers – Bacteria PCR screening |
Ab-vec-sense | Eurofins | GCTTCGTTAGAAC GCGGCTAC |
Bacteria PCR screening |
QA Agarose-TM, Molecular Biology Grade | MP Bio | AGAH0500 | |
NucleoFast 96 PCR Plate | Macherey Nagel | 743.100.100 | |
Enzyme Age I HF | New England Biolabs | R3552L | 20000U/ml |
Enzyme SalI HF | New England Biolabs | R3138L | 20000U/ml |
Enzyme Xho I | New England Biolabs | R0146L | 20000U/ml |
Enzyme BSIWI | New England Biolabs | R0553L | 10000U/ml |
HCg1 (Genbank accession number FJ475055) | |||
LCk (Genbank accession number FJ475056 ) | |||
LCl (Genbank accession number FJ517647) | |||
T4 DNA ligase | Invitrogen by thermoFisher scientific | 15224.017 | 100U (1U/ul) |
2X YT medium | Sigma Aldrich | Y1003-500ML | |
Ampicillin | Sigma Aldrich | 10835242001 | |
LB (Luria Bertani) Broth (Lennox) | Sigma Aldrich | L3022-250G | |
Nucleospin Plasmid DNA, RNA and protein purification | Macherey Nagel | 740588.250 | |
Jet PEI DNA transfection reagent | PolyPlus | 101-40 | |
Flat bottom96-well plate | Falcon | 353072 | |
V-bottom 96-well plate | Nunc/Thermofisher | 055142 | |
Nunc easy 175 cm2 flasks | Nunc/Thermofisher | 12-562-000 | |
ELISA/ELISPOT coating buffer | eBiosciences | 00-0044-59 | |
Nunc maxisorp flat bottom 96 well ELISA plates | Nunc/Thermofisher | 44-2404-21 | high protein binding |
Anti-human IgG Ab conjugated to horseradish peroxidase (HRP) | BD Pharmingen / BD Biosciences | 55788 | |
TMB substrate | BD Biosciences | 555214 | |
Streptavidin | Sigma | S0677 | |
1 mL-HiTrap protein A HP column | GE Healthcare | 17-0402-01 | |
ÄKTA FPLC | GE Healthcare | 18190026 | |
Superdex 200 10/300 GL column | GE Healthcare | 17517501 | |
NGC Quest 10 Plus Chromatography System | BioRad | 7880003 |