Mithridatism Technologies

Advanced Bioengineering meets Natural Hyperimmunity

NextGen Antibody Repertoire Sequencing

From Tim's blood, we have extracted RNA, converted it into cDNA, and then PCR amplified the antibody Fv DNA instructions from all of his B-cells using specially engineered DNA oligo primer sets that contain flapped adaptors suitable for both multiplex DNA barcoded high-throughput sequencing as well as restriction-digest cloning into phage display plasmids. These DNA amplicons have then been sequenced using Illumina MiSeq high throughput sequencing technology to generate approximately 15 million 2x300bp DNA sequence reads. The resulting data is being analyzed on the Amazon Cloud using Distributed Bio's AbGenesis platform and algorithms. By analyzing B-cell diversity generated across different immunizations by different snakes, it will be possible to computationally identify the candidate sequences most likely associated with broad neutralization, narrow down their likely toxin target, and characterize those individual sequences.

Antibody Phage Display

In addition to high-throughput sequencing, the DNA amplicons contain restriction digest positions that enable us to search through the hundreds of million antibodies for neutralizing binders using a technology called phage display. The diversity has been cloned into an m13, pIII-displayed scFv and Fab formatted phage display vector. Distributed Bio's vector has been engineered to both package displayed phage as well as secrete scFvs or Fabs for soluble characterization in ELISA, Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) kinetics measurements as well as in-vitro and in-vivo neutralization assays. The resulting libraries are being panned using a 24-plex Kingfisher automated magnetic bead instrument, where venoms from 12 different snake species are biotin-conjugated and then displayed on streptavidin-conjugated magnetic beads. The resulting scfv and Fab molecules can be validated for binding and specificity by ELISA and SPR, then confirmed in in-vivo challenge on B6 mouse models. The goal will be to identify the minimum set of broadly neutralizing antibodies to produce a stable, universal, fully human antivenom.

Therapeutic Optimization

Antibody therapeutics are vulnerable to degradation during heating and drying if not carefully engineered. Existing antivenoms are drawn directly from animals and have received no engineering optimization. Distributed Bio specializes in therapeutic developability optimization of monoclonal antibodies. This includes analysis and out-engineering of biochemical liabilities including N-linked glycosylation sites, deamination sites, acid hydrolysis sites, free Cys, solvent accessible Met, framework mutations, inferior framework deselection, and enrichment for heat stability mutations. The resulting molecules will be suitable for a therapeutic formulation of the last antivenom that the world will ever need.

 

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Technology Research that enables

Mithros Bio Pipeline

J Glanville*, Huang Huang*, et al. "Identifying specificity groups in the T cell receptor repertoire." Nature (2017).

J Glanville*, T Kuo*, HC von Büdingen* et al, “Naive antibody gene-segment frequencies are heritable and unaltered by chronic lymphocyte ablation”, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011

 

J Glanville*, W Zhai*, J Berka* et al, “Precise determination of the diversity of the combinatorial library gives insight into the human immunoglobulin repertoire,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009

 

J Glanville et al, “Berkeley Phylogenomics Group web servers: resources for structural phylogenomic analysis”, Nucleic acids research, 2007

 

Glanville, J., et al. "Deep sequencing in library selection projects: what insight does it bring?." Current opinion in structural biology 33 (2015): 146-160.

 

W Zhai*, J Glanville* et al, “Synthetic antibodies designed on natural sequence landscapes”, Journal of Molecular Biology, 2011

 

A Han, J Glanville et al. "Linking T-cell receptor sequence to functional phenotype at the single-cell level." Nature biotechnology (2014).

 

M Birnbaum, et al. "Deconstructing the Peptide-MHC Specificity of T Cell Recognition." Cell 157.5 (2014): 1073-1087.

 

J Ryan, R Hovde, J Glanville, et al. "Successful immunotherapy induces previously unidentified allergen-specific CD4+ T-cell subsets." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2016): 201520180.

 

C Watson, J Glanville, and W Marasco. "The Individual and Population Genetics of Antibody Immunity." Trends in Immunology (2017).

 

HV Büdingen, T Kuo, S Marina, C Belle, L Apeltein, J Glanville et al. “B cell exchange across the blood-brain barrier in multiple sclerosis.” The Journal of Clinical Investigation 122.12 (2012): 4533.

 

C Mahon, M Lamburt, J Glanville, et al. “Comprehensive interrogation of a minimalist synthetic CDR-H3 library and its ability to generate antibodies with therapeutic potential.” Journal of Molecular Biology (2013).

 

J Benichou, J Glanville et al. "The Restricted DH Gene Reading Frame Usage in the Expressed Human Antibody Repertoire Is Selected Based upon its Amino Acid Content." The Journal of Immunology 190.11 (2013): 5567-5577.

 

A Han, E Newell, J Glanville, et al. “Dietary gluten triggers concomitant activation of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and g/d T cells in celiac disease.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110.32 (2013): 13073-13078.

 

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Liberman, Gilad, et al. “Estimate of Within Population Incremental Selection Through Branch Imbalance in Lineage Trees.” Nucleic Acids Research (2015).

 

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Qi, Qian, et al. "Diversity and clonal selection in the human T-cell repertoire." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 111.36 (2014): 13139-13144.

 

Frigotto, Laura, et al. "Codon-Precise, Synthetic, Antibody Fragment Libraries Built Using Automated Hexamer Codon Additions and Validated through Next Generation Sequencing." Antibodies 4.2 (2015): 88-102.

 

Xiao, Liang, et al. "A catalog of the mouse gut metagenome." Nature Biotechnology 33.10 (2015): 1103-1108.

 

Looney, Timothy J., et al. "Human B-cell isotype switching origins of IgE." Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (2015).

 

Leighton, Philip A., et al. "A diverse repertoire of human immunoglobulin variable genes in a chicken B cell line is generated by both gene conversion and somatic hypermutation." Frontiers in immunology 6 (2015).

 

Wei, Yu-Ling, et al. "A highly focused antigen receptor repertoire characterizes γδ T cells that are poised to make IL-17 rapidly in naive animals." Frontiers in immunology 6 (2015).

 

Avnir, Yuval, et al. "IGHV1-69 polymorphism modulates anti-influenza antibody repertoires, correlates with IGHV utilization shifts and varies by ethnicity." Scientific reports 6 (2016).

 

Yeung, Yik Andy, et al. "Germline-encoded neutralization of a Staphylococcus aureus virulence factor by the human antibody repertoire." Nature Communications 7 (2016): 13376.

 

Levin, Mattias, et al. "Persistence and evolution of allergen-specific IgE repertoires during subcutaneous specific immunotherapy." Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 137.5 (2016): 1535-1544.

 

Glanville, J., et al. "Deep sequencing in library selection projects: What insight does it bring?." Current opinion in structural biology 33 (2015): 146-160.

 

Watson, Corey T., et al. "Comment on “A Database of Human Immune Receptor Alleles Recovered from Population Sequencing Data”." The Journal of Immunology 198.9 (2017): 3371-3373.

 

Steiniger, Sebastian CJ, et al. "Comparative analysis of the feline immunoglobulin repertoire." Biologicals 46 (2017): 81-87.

 

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