Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Daniel G. Brenner is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Daniel G. Brenner.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

Production of Antigen-Specific Human Antibodies from Mice Engineered with Human Heavy and Light Chain YACsa

Aya Jakobovits; Larry Green; Margaret C. Hardy; Catherine E. Maynard-Currie; Hirohisa Tsuda; Donna M. Louie; Michael Mendez; Hadi Abderrahim; Masato Noguchi; Douglas H. Smith; Yongjun Zeng; Nathaniel E. David; Hitoshi Sasai; Dan Garza; Daniel G. Brenner; Joanna F. Hales; Ryan McGuinness; Daniel J. Capon; Sue Klapholz

Our paper describes the introduction of large fragments of both the human heavy and light chain Ig genes into the mouse germline to create a mouse strain capable of producing a broad repertoire of antigen-specific, fully human antibodies. The human immunoglobulin gene sequences were functional in the context of the mouse machinery for antibody recombination and expression, either in the presence or absence of functional endogenous genes. This was demonstrated by their ability to undergo diverse rearrangement, to be expressed at significant levels, and to exclude expression of mouse immunoglobulins irrespective of their copy number or site of integration. The decrease in susceptibility to influence by adjacent genomic sequences may reflect the greater size, variable gene content, or structural integrity of the human Ig YACs and/or the presence of unidentified but important regulatory elements needed for optimal expression of the human immunoglobulin genes and their correct regulation. Our results show that mouse B cells coexpressing human heavy and kappa chains, upon immunization, can produce antigen-specific, fully human antibodies. Furthermore, the human heavy and kappa chain YACs induced differentiation and maturation of the growth-arrested B-cell lineage in mice with inactivated endogenous Ig genes, leading to the production of a diverse repertoire of fully human antibodies at levels approaching those in normal serum. These results suggest the potential value of these mice as a source of fully human antibodies for human therapy. Furthermore, it is expected that such mice would lack immunological tolerance to and thus readily yield antibodies to human proteins, which may constitute an important class of targets for monoclonal antibody therapy. Our findings suggest that the introduction of even larger portions of the human heavy and light chain loci, which should be achievable with the ES cell-yeast spheroplast fusion technology described, will result in strains of mice ultimately capable of recapitulating the full antibody repertoire characteristic of the human humoral response to infection and immunization. The present and future mouse strains may prove to be valuable tools for studying the molecular mechanisms and regulatory sequences influencing the programmed assembly and expression of human antibodies in the normal immune response, as well as the abnormal response characteristic of autoimmune disease and other disorders. The strategy we have described for the introduction of large segments of the human genome into mice in conjunction with the inactivation of the corresponding mouse loci may also have broad applicability to the investigation of other complex or uncharacterized loci.


Archive | 1996

Human antibodies derived from immunized xenomice

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 1991

Generation of xenogeneic antibodies

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Kalpholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 1995

Generation of Xenogenetic antibodies

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 1996

Human anti-IL-8 antibodies, derived from immunized xenomice

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 2016

Analysis of homozygous mutant chimeric mice: Deletion of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain joining region blocks B-cell development and antibody production (B-cell deficiency/immunoglobulin gene rearrangement/gene targeting/embryonic stem cells)

Aya Jakobovits; German J. Vergara; Jacqueline L. Kennedy; Joanna F. Hales; Ryan McGuinness; Denise E. Casentini-Borocz; Daniel G. Brenner; Gillis R. Otten


Archive | 2005

Human antibody originated from immunized xenomouse

Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Raju Kucherlapati; ダニエル ジェイ. カポン; ラジュ クシェルラパティー; スー クラホルツ; アヤ ジャコボビッツ; ダニエル ジー. ブレナー


Archive | 1996

Anticorps humains contre le EGFR, produit par des souris transgéniques

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 1996

Anticorps humains derives de xeno-souris immunisees

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon


Archive | 1996

Anticorps humains dérivés à partir de xénosouris immunisée

Raju Kucherlapati; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Daniel G. Brenner; Daniel J. Capon

Collaboration


Dive into the Daniel G. Brenner's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aya Jakobovits

Weizmann Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raju Kucherlapati

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aya Jakobovits

Weizmann Institute of Science

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Raju Kucherlapati

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douglas H. Smith

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge