Harris, Katherine E. Force Aldred, Shelley Davison, Laura M. Ogana, Heather Anne N. Boudreau, Andrew Brüggemann, Marianne Osborn, Michael Ma, Biao Buelow, Benjamin Clarke, Starlynn C. Dang, Kevin H. Iyer, Suhasini Jorgensen, Brett Pham, Duy T. Pratap, Payal P. S. Rangaswamy, Udaya Schellenberger, Ute van Schooten, Wim C. Ugamraj, Harshad S. Vafa, Omid Buelow, Roland D. Trinklein, Nathan Image_3_Sequence-Based Discovery Demonstrates That Fixed Light Chain Human Transgenic Rats Produce a Diverse Repertoire of Antigen-Specific Antibodies.jpeg <p>We created a novel transgenic rat that expresses human antibodies comprising a diverse repertoire of heavy chains with a single common rearranged kappa light chain (IgKV3-15-JK1). This fixed light chain animal, called OmniFlic, presents a unique system for human therapeutic antibody discovery and a model to study heavy chain repertoire diversity in the context of a constant light chain. The purpose of this study was to analyze heavy chain variable gene usage, clonotype diversity, and to describe the sequence characteristics of antigen-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) isolated from immunized OmniFlic animals. Using next-generation sequencing antibody repertoire analysis, we measured heavy chain variable gene usage and the diversity of clonotypes present in the lymph node germinal centers of 75 OmniFlic rats immunized with 9 different protein antigens. Furthermore, we expressed 2,560 unique heavy chain sequences sampled from a diverse set of clonotypes as fixed light chain antibody proteins and measured their binding to antigen by ELISA. Finally, we measured patterns and overall levels of somatic hypermutation in the full B-cell repertoire and in the 2,560 mAbs tested for binding. The results demonstrate that OmniFlic animals produce an abundance of antigen-specific antibodies with heavy chain clonotype diversity that is similar to what has been described with unrestricted light chain use in mammals. In addition, we show that sequence-based discovery is a highly effective and efficient way to identify a large number of diverse monoclonal antibodies to a protein target of interest.</p> monoclonal human antibodies;transgenic rodent;rearranged light chain;somatic hypermutation;deep sequencing;antibody repertoire;humanized rodent 2018-04-24
    https://frontiersin.figshare.com/articles/figure/Image_3_Sequence-Based_Discovery_Demonstrates_That_Fixed_Light_Chain_Human_Transgenic_Rats_Produce_a_Diverse_Repertoire_of_Antigen-Specific_Antibodies_jpeg/6174761
10.3389/fimmu.2018.00889.s003