Monoclonal antibodies from human sources are being increasingly recognized as valuable options in many therapeutic areas. These antibodies can show exquisite specificity and high potency while maintaining a desirable safety… Click to show full abstract
Monoclonal antibodies from human sources are being increasingly recognized as valuable options in many therapeutic areas. These antibodies can show exquisite specificity and high potency while maintaining a desirable safety profile, having been matured and tolerized within human patients. However, the discovery of these antibodies presents important challenges, since the B cells encoding therapeutic antibodies can be rare in a typical blood draw and are short-lived ex vivo. Furthermore, the unique pairing of VH and VL domains in each B cell contributes to specificity and function; therefore, maintaining antibody chain pairing presents a throughput limitation. This work will review the various approaches aimed at addressing these challenges with an eye to next-generation methods for high-throughput discovery from the human B-cell repertoire.
               
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