Mark Tornetta
Johnson & Johnson
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark Tornetta.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2010
Lei Shi; John Wheeler; Raymond W. Sweet; Jin Lu; Jinquan Luo; Mark Tornetta; Brian Whitaker; Ramachandra Reddy; Raymond Brittingham; Lina Borozdina; Qiang Chen; Bernard Amegadzie; David M. Knight; Juan Carlos Almagro; Ping Tsui
Filamentous phage was the first display platform employed to isolate antibodies in vitro and is still the most broadly used. The success of phage display is due to its robustness, ease of use, and comprehensive technology development, as well as a broad range of selection methods developed during the last two decades. We report here the first combinatorial synthetic Fab libraries displayed on pIX, a fusion partner different from the widely used pIII. The libraries were constructed on four V(L) and three V(H) domains encoded by IGV and IGJ germ-line genes frequently used in human antibodies, which were diversified to mirror the variability observed in the germ-line genes and antibodies isolated from natural sources. Two sets of libraries were built, one with diversity focused on V(H) by keeping V(L) in the germ-line gene configuration and the other with diversity in both V domains. After selection on a diverse panel of proteins, numerous specific Fabs with affinities ranging from 0.2 nM to 20 nM were isolated. V(H) diversity was sufficient for isolating Fabs to most antigens, whereas variability in V(L) was required for isolation of antibodies to some targets. After the application of an integrated maturation process consisting of reshuffling V(L) diversity, the affinity of selected antibodies was improved up to 100-fold to the low picomolar range, suitable for in vivo studies. The results demonstrate the feasibility of displaying complex Fab libraries as pIX fusion proteins for antibody discovery and optimization and lay the foundation for studies on the structure-function relationships of antibodies.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2010
Mark Tornetta; Scott Baker; Brian Whitaker; Jin Lu; Qiang Chen; Eileen Pisors; Lei Shi; Jinquan Luo; Raymond Sweet; Ping Tsui
Fab antibody display on filamentous phage is widely applied to de novo antibody discovery and engineering. Here we describe a phagemid system for the efficient display and affinity selection of Fabs through linkage to the minor coat protein pIX. Display was successful by fusion of either Fd or Lc through a short linker to the amino terminus of pIX and co-expression of the counter Lc or Fd as a secreted, soluble fragment. Assembly of functional Fab was confirmed by demonstration of antigen-specific binding using antibodies of known specificity. Phage displaying a Fab specific for RSV-F protein with Fd linked to pIX showed efficient, antigen-specific enrichment when mixed with phage displaying a different specificity. The functionality of this system for antibody engineering was evaluated in an optimization study. A RSV-F protein specific antibody with an affinity of about 2nM was randomized at 4 positions in light chain CDR1. Three rounds of selection with decreasing antigen concentration yielded Fabs with an affinity improvement up to 70-fold and showed a general correlation between enrichment frequency and affinity. We conclude that the pIX coat protein complements other display systems in filamentous phage as an efficient vehicle for low copy display and selection of Fab proteins.
Methods | 2012
Mark Tornetta; Ramachandra Reddy; John Wheeler
Antibody discovery and optimization by M13 phage display have evolved significantly over the past twenty years. Multiple methods of antibody display and selection have been developed - direct display on pIII or indirect display through a Cysteine disulfide linkage or a coiled-coil adapter protein. Here we describe display of Fab libraries on the smaller pIX protein at the opposite end of the virion and its application to discovery of novel antibodies from naive libraries. Antibody selection based on pIX-mediated display produces results comparable to other in vitro methods and uses an efficient direct infection of antigen-bound phages, eliminating any chemical dissociation step(s). Additionally, some evidence suggests that pIX-mediated display can be more efficient than pIII-mediated display in affinity selections. Functional assessment of phage-derived antibodies can be hindered by insufficient affinities or lack of epitopic diversity. Here we describe an approach to managing primary hits from our Fab phage libraries into epitope bins and subsequent high-throughput maturation of clones to isolate epitope- and sequence-diverse panels of high affinity binders. Use of the Octet biosensor was done to examine Fab binding in a facile label-free method and determine epitope competition groups. A receptor extracellular domain and chemokine were subjected to this method of binning and affinity maturation. Parental clones demonstrated improvement in affinity from 1-100nM to 10-500pM.
Human antibodies | 2008
Ping Tsui; Anuk Das; Brian Whitaker; Mark Tornetta; Nicole Stowell; Prabakaran Kesavan; Elisabeth Kaiser; Eilyn R. Lacy; Li Yan; Linda A. Snyder; Raymond Sweet
Archive | 2005
Alfred Delvecchio; Ping Tsui; Patrick Branigan; Leslee Conrad; Nicole D. Day; Changbao Liu; Raymond Sweet; Sheng-Jiun Wu; Jose Centro Nacional De Microbiologia Melero; Jinquan Luo; Gabriela Canziani; Mark Tornetta; Gopalan Raghunathan; Venkata Chalapathi Koka
Archive | 2009
Ping Tsui; Lei Shi; Jin Lu; John Wheeler; Brian Whitaker; Lionella Borozdina-Birch; Juan Carlos Almagro; Bernard Amegadzie; Mark Tornetta; Ramachandra Reddy; David M. Knight; Jinquan Luo; Raymond Sweet; Qiang Chen
Archive | 2011
Juan Carlos Almagro; Patrick Branigan; Colleen Kane; William Strohl; Susann Taudte; Mark Tornetta; John Wheeler
Archive | 2013
Karen E. Duffy; Catherine Healy; Roberta Lamb; Ravi Malaviya; Michael Pratta; Natalie Fursov; Jinquan Luo; Michael Naso; Mark Tornetta; John Wheeler; Sheng-Jiun Wu; LeRoy Hall
Archive | 2011
Juan Carlos Almagro; Patrick Branigan; Colleen Kane; William Strohl; Susann Taudte; Mark Tornetta; John Wheeler
Archive | 2008
Ping Tsui; Lei Shi; Jin Lu; John Wheeler; Brian Whitaker; Lionella Borozdina-Birch; Juan Carlos Almagro; Bernard Amegadzie; Mark Tornetta; Ramachandra Reddy; David M. Knight; Jinquan Luo; Raymond Sweet