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Dive into the research topics where Margaret M. Kiss is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret M. Kiss.


Antibodies | 2016

Generating Recombinant Antibodies to Membrane Proteins through Phage Display

Renhua Huang; Margaret M. Kiss; Melissa Batonick; Michael P. Weiner; Brian K. Kay

One of the most important classes of proteins in terms of drug targets is cell surface membrane proteins, and yet it is a challenging set of proteins for generating high-quality affinity reagents. In this review, we focus on the use of phage libraries, which display antibody fragments, for generating recombinant antibodies to membrane proteins. Such affinity reagents generally have high specificity and affinity for their targets. They have been used for cell staining, for promoting protein crystallization to solve three-dimensional structures, for diagnostics, and for treating diseases as therapeutics. We cover publications on this topic from the past 10 years, with a focus on the various formats of membrane proteins for affinity selection and the diverse affinity selection strategies used. Lastly, we discuss the challenges faced in this field and provide possible directions for future efforts.


Methods | 2012

Use of micro-emulsion technology for the directed evolution of antibodies

Diane L. Buhr; Felicity E. Acca; Erika G. Holland; Katie Johnson; Gail M. Maksymiuk; Ada Vaill; Brian K. Kay; David A. Weitz; Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss

Affinity reagents, such as antibodies, are needed to study protein expression patterns, sub-cellular localization, and post-translational modifications in complex mixtures and tissues. Phage Emulsion, Secretion, and Capture (ESCape) is a novel micro-emulsion technology that utilizes water-in-oil (W/O) emulsions for the identification and isolation of cells secreting phage particles that display desirable antibodies. Using this method, a large library of antibody-displaying phage will bind to beads in individual compartments. Rather than using biopanning on a large mixed population, phage micro-emulsion technology allows us to individually query clonal populations of amplified phage against the antigen. The use of emulsions to generate microdroplets has the promise of accelerating phage selection experiments by permitting fine discrimination of kinetic parameters for binding to targets. In this study, we demonstrate the ability of phage micro-emulsion technology to distinguish two scFvs with a 300-fold difference in binding affinities (100nM and 300pM, respectively). In addition, we describe the application of phage micro-emulsion technology for the selection of scFvs that are resistant to elevated temperatures.


New Biotechnology | 2016

Platform for high-throughput antibody selection using synthetically-designed antibody libraries

Melissa Batonick; Erika G. Holland; Valeria Busygina; Dawn Alderman; Brian K. Kay; Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss

Synthetic humanized antibody libraries are frequently generated by random incorporation of changes at multiple positions in the antibody hypervariable regions. Although these libraries have very large theoretical diversities (>10(20)), the practical diversity that can be achieved by transformation of Escherichia coli is limited to about 10(10). To constrain the practical diversity to sequences that more closely mimic the diversity of natural human antibodies, we generated a scFv phage library using entirely pre-defined complementarity determining regions (CDR). We have used this library to select for novel antibodies against four human protein targets and demonstrate that identification of enriched sequences at each of the six CDRs in early selection rounds can be used to reconstruct a consensus antibody with selectivity for the target.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2016

pMINERVA: A donor-acceptor system for the in vivo recombineering of scFv into IgG molecules.

M. Batonick; Margaret M. Kiss; E.P. Fuller; C.M. Magadan; Erika G. Holland; Q. Zhao; D. Wang; Brian K. Kay; Michael P. Weiner

Phage display is the most widely used method for selecting binding molecules from recombinant antibody libraries. However, validation of the phage antibodies often requires early production of the cognate full-length immunoglobulin G (IgG). The conversion of phage library outputs to a full immunoglobulin via standard subcloning is time-consuming and limits the number of clones that can be evaluated. We have developed a novel system to convert scFvs from a phage display vector directly into IgGs without any in vitro subcloning steps. This new vector system, named pMINERVA, makes clever use of site-specific bacteriophage integrases that are expressed in Escherichia coli and intron splicing that occurs within mammalian cells. Using this system, a phage display vector contains both bacterial and mammalian regulatory regions that support antibody expression in E. coli and mammalian cells. A single-chain variable fragment (scFv) antibody is expressed on the surface of bacteriophage M13 as a genetic fusion to the gpIII coat protein. The scFv is converted to an IgG that can be expressed in mammalian cells by transducing a second E. coli strain. In that strain, the phiC31 recombinase fuses the heavy chain constant domain from an acceptor plasmid to the heavy chain variable domain and introduces controlling elements upstream of the light chain variable domain. Splicing in mammalian cells removes a synthetic intron containing the M13 gpIII gene to produce the fusion of the light chain variable domain to the constant domain. We show that phage displaying a scFv and recombinant IgGs generated using this system are expressed at wild-type levels and retain normal function. Use of the pMINERVA completely eliminates the labor-intensive subcloning and DNA sequence confirmation steps currently needed to convert a scFv into a functional IgG Ab.


New Biotechnology | 2017

Rational library design by functional CDR resampling

Qi Zhao; Diane L. Buhr; Courtney Gunter; Jenny Frenette; Mary Ferguson; Eric Sanford; Erika G. Holland; Chitra Rajagopal; Melissa Batonick; Margaret M. Kiss; Michael P. Weiner

Successful antibody discovery relies on diversified libraries, where two aspects are implied, namely the absolute number of unique clones and the percentage of functional clones. Instead of pursuing the absolute quantity thresholded by current display technology, we have sought to maximize the effective diversity by improving functional clone percentage. With the combined effort of bioinformatics, structural biology, molecular immunology and phage display technology, we devised a bioinformatic pipeline to construct and validate libraries via combinatorial assembly of sequences from a database of experimentally validated antibodies. Furthermore, we showed that the libraries constructed as such yielded a significantly increased success rate against different antigen types and generated over 20-fold more unique hits per targets compared with libraries based on traditional degenerate nucleotide methods. Our study indicated that predefined CDR sequences with optimized CDR-framework compatibility could be a productive direction of functional library construction for in vitro antibody development.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2011

Phage ESCape: an emulsion-based approach for the selection of recombinant phage display antibodies.

Margaret M. Kiss; Erika G. Babineau; Maria Bonatsakis; Diane L. Buhr; Gail M. Maksymiuk; Dong Wang; Dawn Alderman; Daniel M. Gelperin; Michael P. Weiner


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2013

AXM mutagenesis: An efficient means for the production of libraries for directed evolution of proteins

Erika G. Holland; Diane L. Buhr; Felicity E. Acca; Dawn Alderman; Kristin Bovat; Valeria Busygina; Brian K. Kay; Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2015

In vivo elimination of parental clones in general and site-directed mutagenesis

Erika G. Holland; Felicity E. Acca; Kristina M. Belanger; Mary E. Bylo; Brian K. Kay; Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss


Archive | 2013

COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS FOR THE IDENTIFICATION AND ISOLATION OF CELL-MEMBRANE PROTEIN SPECIFIC BINDING MOIETIES

Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss


Archive | 2017

METHODS OF UTILIZING RECOMBINATION FOR THE IDENTIFICATION OF BINDING MOIETIES

Michael P. Weiner; Margaret M. Kiss

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Brian K. Kay

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Renhua Huang

University of Illinois at Chicago

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