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Capturing and Recreating Diverse Antibody Repertoires as Multivalent Recombinant Polyclonal Antibody Drugs

Authors :
Everett Meyer
David S. Johnson
Lucy Roalfe
Rena A. Mizrahi
Terencio Jv
David Goldblatt
Ariel R Niedecken
Marcus O. Muench
Jeanfreau R
Olson C
Heather E. Lynch
Matthew J. Spindler
Ashley Gras
Thomas H. Oguin
Emily Benzie
Graham Simmons
Kyle P Carter
Robert C. Edgar
Adam S. Adler
Emma Pearce
Yoong Wearn Lim
Kacy Stadtmiller
Jan Fredrik Simons
Hayley Richardson
Bishal K. Gautam
Renee Leong
Ellen K. Wagner
Angélica V Medina-Cucurella
Adams Ms
Chiang Y
Michael A. Asensio
Anushka T. Ramjag
LaRee Tracy
Brendan Tinsley
Jasmeen Saini
Jackson Leong
Christine V.F. Carrington
Sheila M. Keating
Monroe B
Carina Vingsbo Lundberg
Vishal A. Manickam
Chamow Sm
Büscher D
Nicholas Wayham
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Plasma-derived polyclonal antibodies are polyvalent drugs used for many important clinical indications that require modulation of multiple drug targets simultaneously, including emerging infectious disease and transplantation. However, plasma-derived drugs suffer many problems, including low potency, impurities, constraints on supply, and batch-to-batch variation. In this study, we demonstrated proofs-of-concept for a technology that uses microfluidics and molecular genomics to capture diverse mammalian antibody repertoires as multivalent recombinant drugs. These “recombinant hyperimmune” drugs comprised thousands to tens of thousands of antibodies and were derived from convalescent human donors, or vaccinated human donors or immunized mice. Here we used our technology to build a highly potent recombinant hyperimmune for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus-2 (SARS CoV-2) in less than three months. We also validated a recombinant hyperimmune for Zika virus disease that abrogates antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE) through Fc engineering. For patients with primary immune deficiency (PID), we built high potency polyvalent recombinant hyperimmunes against pathogens that commonly cause serious lung infections. Finally, to address the limitations of rabbit-derived anti-thymocyte globulin (ATG), we generated a recombinant human version and demonstrated in vivo function against graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). Recombinant hyperimmunes are a novel class of drugs that could be used to target a wide variety of other clinical applications, including cancer and autoimmunity.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........04b038c76143f6982660b22067931792
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.05.232975