posted on 2016-10-25, 00:00authored byAdrian Guthals, Yutian Gan, Laura Murray, Yongmei Chen, Jeremy Stinson, Gerald Nakamura, Jennie
R Lill, Wendy Sandoval, Nuno Bandeira
One direct route for the discovery
of therapeutic human monoclonal
antibodies (mAbs) involves the isolation of peripheral B cells from
survivors/sero-positive individuals after exposure to an infectious
reagent or disease etiology, followed by single-cell sequencing or
hybridoma generation. Peripheral B cells, however, are not always
easy to obtain and represent only a small percentage of the total
B-cell population across all bodily tissues. Although it has been
demonstrated that tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) techniques can
interrogate the full polyclonal antibody (pAb) response to an antigen
in vivo, all current approaches identify MS/MS spectra against databases
derived from genetic sequencing of B cells from the same patient.
In this proof-of-concept study, we demonstrate the feasibility of
a novel MS/MS antibody discovery approach in which only serum antibodies
are required without the need for sequencing of genetic material.
Peripheral pAbs from a cytomegalovirus-exposed individual were purified
by glycoprotein B antigen affinity and de novo sequenced from MS/MS
data. Purely MS-derived mAbs were then manufactured in mammalian cells
to validate potency via antigen-binding ELISA. Interestingly, we found
that these mAbs accounted for 1 to 2% of total donor IgG but were
not detected in parallel sequencing of memory B cells from the same
patient.