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Dive into the research topics where Claire Louise Dobson is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire Louise Dobson.


mAbs | 2009

Human monomeric antibody fragments to TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 that display potent in vitro agonism

Claire Louise Dobson; Sarah Helen Main; Philip Newton; Matthieu Chodorge; Karen Cadwallader; Robin Humphreys; Vivian Albert; Tristan J. Vaughan; Ralph Minter; Bryan M. Edwards

Apoptosis through the TRAIL receptor pathway can be induced via agonistic IgG to either TRAIL-R1 or TRAIL-R2. Here we describe the use of phage display to isolate a substantive panel of fully human anti-TRAIL receptor single chain Fv fragments (scFvs); 234 and 269 different scFvs specific for TRAIL-R1 and TRAIL-R2 respectively. In addition, 134 different scFvs that were cross-reactive for both receptors were isolated. To facilitate screening of all 637 scFvs for potential agonistic activity in vitro, a novel high-throughput surrogate apoptosis assay was developed. Ten TRAIL-R1 specific scFv and 6 TRAIL-R2 specific scFv were shown to inhibit growth of tumor cells in vitro in the absence of any cross-linking agents. These scFv were all highly specific for either TRAIL-R1 or TRAIL-R2, potently inhibited tumor cell proliferation, and were antagonists of TRAIL binding. Moreover, further characterization of TRAIL-R1 agonistic scFv demonstrated significant anti-tumor activity when expressed and purified as a monomeric Fab fragment. Thus, scFv and Fab fragments, in addition to whole IgG, can be agonistic and induce tumor cell death through specific binding to either TRAIL-R1 or TRAIL-R2. These potent agonistic scFv were all isolated directly from the starting phage antibody library and demonstrated significant tumor cell killing properties without any requirement for affinity maturation. Some of these selected scFv have been converted to IgG format and are being studied extensively in clinical trials to investigate their potential utility as human monoclonal antibody therapeutics for the treatment of human cancer.


mAbs | 2014

A novel IgE-neutralizing antibody for the treatment of severe uncontrolled asthma

E. Suzanne Cohen; Claire Louise Dobson; Helena Käck; Bing Wang; Dorothy A. Sims; Chris Lloyd; Elizabeth England; D. Gareth Rees; Hongwei Guo; Sophia N. Karagiannis; Siobhan O’Brien; Sofia Persdotter; Helena Ekdahl; Robin Butler; Feenagh Keyes; Sarah Oakley; Mats Carlsson; Emmanuel Briend; Trevor Wilkinson; Ian K Anderson; Phillip Monk; Karin von Wachenfeldt; Per-Olof Fredrik Eriksson; Hannah J. Gould; Tristan J. Vaughan; Richard May

The critical role played by IgE in allergic asthma is well-documented and clinically precedented, but some patients in whom IgE neutralization may still offer clinical benefit are excluded from treatment with the existing anti-IgE therapy, omalizumab, due to high total IgE levels or body mass. In this study, we sought to generate a novel high affinity anti-IgE antibody (MEDI4212) with potential to treat a broad severe asthma patient population. Analysis of body mass, total and allergen-specific IgE levels in a cohort of severe asthmatics was used to support the rationale for development of a high affinity IgE-targeted antibody therapeutic. Phage display technology was used to generate a human IgG1 lead antibody, MEDI4212, which was characterized in vitro using binding, signaling and functional assay systems. Protein crystallography was used to determine the details of the interaction between MEDI4212 and IgE. MEDI4212 bound human IgE with an affinity of 1.95 pM and was shown to target critical residues in the IgE Cε3 domain critical for interaction with FcεRI. MEDI4212 potently inhibited responses through FcεRI and also prevented the binding of IgE to CD23. When used ex vivo at identical concentration, MEDI4212 depleted free-IgE from human sera to levels ~1 log lower than omalizumab. Our results thus indicate that MEDI4212 is a novel, high affinity antibody that binds specifically to IgE and prevents IgE binding to its receptors. MEDI4212 effectively depleted free-IgE from human sera ex vivo to a level (1 IU/mL) anticipated to provide optimal IgE suppression in severe asthma patients.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2015

Isolation of high-affinity, neutralizing anti-idiotype antibodies by phage and ribosome display for application in immunogenicity and pharmacokinetic analyses

Stacey E. Chin; Franco Ferraro; Maria Groves; Meina Liang; Tristan J. Vaughan; Claire Louise Dobson

Anti-idiotype antibodies against a therapeutic antibody are key reagents for the development of immunogenicity and pharmacokinetic (PK) assays during pre-clinical and clinical development. Here we have used a combination of phage and ribosome display to isolate a panel of monoclonal anti-idiotype antibodies with sub-nanomolar affinity and high specificity to a human anti-IgE monoclonal antibody. Anti-idiotype antibodies were enriched from scFv libraries using phage display, and a biochemical epitope competition assay was used to identify anti-idiotypes which neutralized IgE binding, which was essential for the intended use of the anti-idiotypes as positive controls in neutralizing anti-drug antibody (Nab) assays. The phage display-derived anti-idiotype antibodies were rapidly affinity-matured using a random point mutagenesis approach in ribosome display. Ten anti-idiotype antibodies with improved neutralizing activity relative to the parent antibodies displayed sub-nanomolar affinity for the anti-IgE antibody, representing up to 20-fold improvements in affinity from just two rounds of affinity-based selection. The optimized anti-idiotype antibodies retained the specificity of the parent antibodies, and importantly, were fit for purpose for use in PK and anti-drug antibody (ADA) assays. The approach we describe here for generation of anti-idiotype antibodies to an anti-IgE antibody is generically applicable for the rapid isolation and affinity maturation of anti-idiotype antibodies to any antibody-based drug candidate.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

Isolation of Potent CGRP Neutralizing Antibodies Using Four Simple Assays.

Frances Neal; Joanne Arnold; Christine J. Rossant; Sadhana Podichetty; David Lowne; Claire Louise Dobson; Trevor Wilkinson; Caroline Colley; Rob Howes; Tristan J. Vaughan

Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a small neuropeptide and a potent vasodilator that is widely associated with chronic pain and migraine. An antibody that inhibits CGRP function would be a potential therapeutic for treatment of these disorders. Here we describe the isolation of highly potent antibodies to CGRP from phage and ribosome display libraries and characterization of their epitope, species cross-reactivity, kinetics, and functional activity. Homogenous time-resolved fluorescence (HTRF) binding assays identified antibodies with the desired species cross-reactivity from naïve libraries, and HTRF epitope competition assays were used to characterize and group scFv by epitope. The functional inhibition of CGRP and species cross-reactivity of purified scFv and antibodies were subsequently confirmed using cAMP assays. We show that epitope competition assays could be used as a surrogate for functional cell-based assays during affinity maturation, in combination with scFv off-rate ranking by biolayer interferometry (BLI). This is the first time it has been shown that off-rate ranking can be predictive of functional activity for anti-CGRP antibodies. Here we demonstrate how, by using just four simple assays, diverse panels of antibodies to CGRP can be identified. These assay formats have potential utility in the identification of antibodies to other therapeutic targets.


mAbs | 2018

Structure and characterization of a high affinity C5a monoclonal antibody that blocks binding to C5aR1 and C5aR2 receptors

Caroline Colley; Bojana Popovic; Sudharsan Sridharan; Judit É. Debreczeni; David Hargeaves; Michael Fung; Ling–Ling An; Bryan M. Edwards; Joanne Arnold; Elizabeth England; Laura Eghobamien; Ulf Sivars; Liz Flavell; Jonathan Renshaw; Kate F. Wickson; Paul Warrener; Jingying Zha; Rob Woods; Trevor Wilkinson; Claire Louise Dobson; Tristan J. Vaughan

ABSTRACT C5a is a potent anaphylatoxin that modulates inflammation through the C5aR1 and C5aR2 receptors. The molecular interactions between C5a–C5aR1 receptor are well defined, whereas C5a–C5aR2 receptor interactions are poorly understood. Here, we describe the generation of a human antibody, MEDI7814, that neutralizes C5a and C5adesArg binding to the C5aR1 and C5aR2 receptors, without affecting complement–mediated bacterial cell killing. Unlike other anti–C5a mAbs described, this antibody has been shown to inhibit the effects of C5a by blocking C5a binding to both C5aR1 and C5aR2 receptors. The crystal structure of the antibody in complex with human C5a reveals a discontinuous epitope of 22 amino acids. This is the first time the epitope for an antibody that blocks C5aR1 and C5aR2 receptors has been described, and this work provides a basis for molecular studies aimed at further understanding the C5a–C5aR2 receptor interaction. MEDI7814 has therapeutic potential for the treatment of acute inflammatory conditions in which both C5a receptors may mediate inflammation, such as sepsis or renal ischemia–reperfusion injury.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2003

Generation and characterization of LymphoStat‐B, a human monoclonal antibody that antagonizes the bioactivities of B lymphocyte stimulator

Kevin P. Baker; Bryan M. Edwards; Sarah Helen Main; Gil H. Choi; Ruth E. Wager; Wendy Halpern; Patrick B. Lappin; Todd A. Riccobene; Donara Abramian; Les Sekut; Bonnie Sturm; Carol Poortman; Ralph Minter; Claire Louise Dobson; Elizabeth N. Williams; Sara Carmen; Rodger Smith; Viktor Roschke; David M. Hilbert; Tristan J. Vaughan; Vivian R. Albert


Archive | 2008

BINDING MEMBERS FOR INTERLEUKIN-4 RECEPTOR ALPHA (IL-4Rα) - 173

Suzanne Cohen; Claire Louise Dobson; Per-Olof Fredrik Eriksson; Deborah Louise Lane; Wachenfeldt Karin Von


Archive | 2009

BINDING MEMBERS FOR INTERLEUKIN-4 RECEPTOR ALPHA (IL-4Ra) - 836

Suzanne Cohen; Claire Louise Dobson; Per-Olof Fredrik Eriksson; Deborah Louise Lane; Wachenfeldt Karin Von


Archive | 2005

Naive Antibody Libraries from Natural Repertoires

Claire Louise Dobson; Ralph Minter; Celia Hart-Shorrock


mAbs | 2015

Generation of potent mouse monoclonal antibodies to self-proteins using T-cell epitope “tags”

Jennifer Percival-Alwyn; Elizabeth England; Benjamin Kemp; Laura Rapley; Nicola H.E. Davis; Grant R McCarthy; Jayesh B. Majithiya; Dominic J. Corkill; Sarah Welsted; Kevin Minton; E. Suzanne Cohen; Matthew J. Robinson; Claire Louise Dobson; Trevor Wilkinson; Tristan J. Vaughan; Maria Groves; Natalie Tigue

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