Systematic creation of fluorescent fusion polypeptides
11702766 · 2023-07-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
C12N15/64
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K2319/60
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12N15/70
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C40B50/06
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K16/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C40B50/06
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C07K16/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method for creating a plasmid for use in producing a chimeric antibody, comprising (a) receiving a FAB region of the antibody; (b) receiving a fluorescent protein; (c) receiving a linker having length of at least 5 amino acids; (d) using the Gibson assembly process to join the FAB region, the fluorescent protein, and the linker into an expression plasmid.
Claims
1. A method of creating a plasmid for use in producing a chimeric antibody, comprising: (a) receiving a FAB region of the antibody; (b) receiving a fluorescent protein; (c) receiving a linker having length of at least 5 amino acids (natural or unnatural, synthetic); (d) using the Gibson assembly process to join the FAB region, the fluorescent protein, and the linker into an expression plasmid.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising using PCR to produce volumes of the FAB region, the fluorescent protein, and the linker for use in the Gibson assembly process.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving a FAB region comprises determining if the combined length of the FAB region, the fluorescent protein, and the linker will exceed the Durvasula length, and, if so, modifying the FAB region such that the combined length will not exceed the Durvasula length.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein receiving a linker comprises determining the amount the length of (a) the combined length of the FAB region and the fluorescent protein, is less than (b) the Durvasula length, and receiving a linker whose length equals the determined amount.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising determining the difference in length between (a) the combined length of the FAB region and the fluorescent protein, and (b) the Durvasula length, and, (x) if the difference is less than or equal to 5 amino acids, then modifying the FAB region by shortening the length of the FAB region by the amount the difference is less than 5 amino acids and using a linker having a length of 5 amino acids; (y) if the difference greater than 5 amino acids, then using a linker having a length equal to the difference.
6. A method of producing a chimeric antibody, comprising (a) creating a plasmid according to claim 1, (b) inserting the plasmid into at least one of (y) chemically competent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid, (z) electrocompetent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid, and (c) using the bacteria to produce the chimeric antibody.
7. The method of claim 6 wherein step (b) comprises inserting the plasmid into chemically competent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid.
8. The method of claim 6 wherein step (b) comprises inserting the plasmid into electrocompetent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid.
9. The method of claim 6 wherein the bacteria comprises E. coli.
10. A method of producing a chimeric antibody, comprising (a) creating a plasmid according to claim 5, (b) inserting the plasmid into at least one of (y) chemically competent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid, (z) electrocompetent bacteria capable of protein expression from the plasmid, and (c) using the bacteria to produce the chimeric antibody.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the linker comprises at least one natural amino acid.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the linker comprises at least one synthetic amino acid.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the linker comprises at least one natural amino acid and at least one synthetic amino acid.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF INVENTION
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(8) For every new RFAB, development of two linker regions can be required: a first linker linking the variable heavy chain fragment to the 5′ end of the fluorophore and a second linker linking the variable light chain fragment to the 3′ end of the fluorophore. The linker region can be important because enough space needs to exist between the fluorophore and each of the scFv fragments to allow for correct folding and alignment to occur. The linker region from example embodiments of the present invention involves use of a standard linker described in the literature consisting of four glycine residues and a single serine residue (GGGGS). In general for RFABs, this is the minimum linker that is used.
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(10) The following references, each of which is incorporated herein by reference, can facilitate understanding of the present invention.
(11) Markiv et al, Expression of recombinant multi-coloured fluorescent antibodies in gor−/trxB E. coli cytoplasm BMC Biotechnology 2011, 11:117 doi:10.1186/1472-6750-11-117.
(12) Markiv et al, Module based antibody engineering: A novel synthetic REDantibody, Journal of Immunological Methods 364 (2011) 40-49.
(13) Gibson D G, Young L, Chuang R Y, Venter J C, Hutchison C A 3rd, Smith H O (2009). “Enzymatic assembly of DNA molecules up to several hundred kilobases”. Nature Methods. 6 (5): 343-345. doi:10.1038/nmeth.1318. PMID 19363495.
(14) Gibson D G. (2011). “Enzymatic assembly of overlapping DNA fragments”. Methods in Enzymology. 498: 349-361. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-385120-8.00015-2. PMID 21601685.
(15) Wang S, Zheng C, Liu Y, Zheng H, Wang Z (2008). “Construction of multiform scFv antibodies using linker peptide”. Journal of Genetics and Genomics. May; 35(5):313-6. doi: 10.1016/C1673-8527(08)60045-4.
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(18) Chappel J A, He M, Kang A S (1998). “Modulation of antibody display on M13 filamentous phage”. Journal of Immunological Methods. 221(1-2):25-34.
(19) Chappel J A, Rogers W O, Hoffman S L, Kang A S (2004). “Molecular dissection of the human antibody response to the structural repeat epitope of Plasmodium falciparum sporozoite from a protected donor.” Malar Journal. 3:28.
(20) Gu X, Jia X, Feng J, Shen B, Huang Y, Geng S, Sun Y, Wang Y, Li Y, Long M (2010). “Molecular modeling and affinity determination of scFv antibody: proper linker peptide enhances its activity”. Annals of Biomedical Engineering. February; 38(2):537-49. doi: 10.1007/s10439-009-9810-2.
(21) The present invention has been described in connection with various example embodiments. It will be understood that the above description is merely illustrative of the applications of the principles of the present invention, the scope of which is to be determined by the claims viewed in light of the specification. Other variants and modifications of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art.
(22) The sequence listing in the ASCII text file named “sequence-listing-SA152-52001.txt”, created 30 Sep. 2020, size 6K bytes, is incorporated herein by reference