Michael Mendez
Roosevelt Institute
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Featured researches published by Michael Mendez.
Nature Genetics | 1997
Michael Mendez; Larry Green; Jose Corvalan; Xiao-Chi Jia; Catherine E. Maynard-Currie; Xiao-Dong Yang; Michael Gallo; Donna M. Louie; Doris V. Lee; Karen L. Erickson; Jac Luna; Catherine M.-N. Roy; Hadi Abderrahim; Ford Kirschenbaum; Masato Noguchi; Douglas H. Smith; Atsushi Fukushima; Joanna F. Hales; Mitchell H. Finer; C. Geoffrey Davis; Krisztina M. Zsebo; Aya Jakobovits
We constructed two megabase-sized YACs containing large contiguous fragments of the human heavy and kappa (κ) light chain immunoglobulin (Ig) loci in nearly germline configuration, including approximately 66 VH and 32 Vκ genes. We introduced these YACs into Ig-inactivated mice and observed human antibody production which closely resembled that seen in humans in all respects, including gene rearrangement, assembly, and repertoire. Diverse Ig gene usage together with somatic hypermutation enables the mice to generate high affinity fully human antibodies to multiple antigens, including human proteins. Our results underscore the importance of the large Ig fragments with multiple V genes for restoration of a normal humoral immune response. These mice are likely to be a valuable tool for the generation of therapeutic antibodies.
Nature Genetics | 1994
Larry Green; M.C. Hardy; Catherine E. Maynard-Currie; H. Tsuda; Donna M. Louie; Michael Mendez; Hadi Abderrahim; Masato Noguchi; D.H. Smith; Y. Zeng; N.E. David; H. Sasai; D. Garza; D.G. Brenner; Joanna F. Hales; R.P. McGuinness; D.J. Capon; S. Klapholz; Aya Jakobovits
We describe a strategy for producing human monoclonal antibodies in mice by introducing large segments of the human heavy and κ light chain loci contained on yeast artificial chromosomes into the mouse germline. Such mice produce a diverse repertoire of human heavy and light chains, and upon immunization with tetanus toxin have been used to derive antigen–specific, fully human monoclonal antibodies. Breeding such animals with mice engineered by gene targeting to be deficient in mouse immunoglobulin (Ig) production has led to a mouse strain in which high levels of antibodies are produced, mostly comprised of both human heavy and light chains. These strains should provide insight into the adoptive human antibody response and permit the development of fully human monoclonal antibodies with therapeutic potential.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008
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.
Genomics | 1995
Michael Mendez; Hadi Abderrahim; Masato Noguchi; Nathaniel E. David; Margaret C. Hardy; Larry Green; Hirohisa Tsuda; Sienna Yoast; Catherine E. Maynard-Currie; Dan Garza; Robert M. Gemmill; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz
With the goal of creating a strain of mice capable of producing human antibodies, we are cloning and reconstructing the human immunoglobulin germline repertoire in yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs). We describe the identification of YACs containing variable and constant region sequences from the human heavy chain (IgH) and kappa light chain (IgK) loci and the characterization of their integrity in yeast and in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. The IgH locus-derived YAC contains five variable (VH) genes, the major diversity (D) gene cluster, the joining (JH) genes, the intronic enhancer (EH), and the constant region genes, mu (C mu) and delta (C delta). Two IgK locus-derived YACs each contain three variable (V kappa) genes, the joining (J kappa) region, the intronic enhancer (E kappa), the constant gene (C kappa), and the kappa deleting element (kde). The IgH YAC was unstable in yeast, generating a variety of deletion derivatives, whereas both IgK YACs were stable. YACs encoding heavy chain and kappa light chain, retrofitted with the mammalian selectable marker, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT), were each introduced into HPRT-deficient mouse ES cells. Analysis of YAC integrity in ES cell lines revealed that the majority of DNA inserts were integrated in substantially intact form.
Genomics | 1990
Harry A. Drabkin; M. Wright; M. Jonsen; T. Varkony; Carol Jones; M. Sage; S. Gold; Helvise G. Morse; Michael Mendez; Paul Erickson
A somatic cell hybrid mapping panel and molecular probes have been developed for human chromosome 3. This panel defines 11 regions for the short and long arms of the chromosome. Four hundred thirty-two probes have been mapped using these hybrids. One hundred thirty-one of these probes were derived from EcoRI and HindIII flow-sorted libraries. The remaining 301 probes were isolated from NotI boundary and random (partial MboI) libraries constructed from a hybrid that provided a relative enrichment in 3p DNA sequences. For some regions of the chromosome, significant differences in the distribution of probes were noted. This was observed for both the unique sequence flow-sorted and NotI probes. These differences are in agreement with previous suggestions that Giemsa light bands are GC-rich, and therefore gene-rich (especially housekeeping genes), and that the Giemsa dark bands may contain DNA that is more highly condensed. The isolation of probes from different types of libraries, or by different screening strategies, appears to reduce deficiencies that might arise from the use of probes derived with a more limited approach. These hybrids and probes should facilitate the construction of physical and genetic linkage maps to identify various disease loci involving chromosome 3.
Genomics | 1991
Michael Mendez; Sue Klapholz; Bernard H. Brownstein; Robert M. Gemmill
A new method for screening of YAC libraries is described. Individual YACs were pooled into groups of 384 clones and prepared as samples suitable for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. A five hit human YAC library (Brownstein et al., 1989) containing approximately 60,000 clones was condensed into 150 such pools and chromosomal DNAs in each sample were separated on three pulsed field gels containing 50 samples each. Southern blots prepared from these gels were hybridized with probes of interest to identify pools containing homologous YACs. Further purification was performed using standard colony hybridization procedures. Twenty-one probes used thus far have identified 47 positive pools and corresponding YACs have been purified from 28 of these. Some significant advantages of this method include avoidance of DNA sequence analysis and primer generation prior to YAC screening and the ability to handle the entire library on three filters. The screening approach described here permits rapid isolation of YACs corresponding to unsequenced loci and will accelerate establishment of YAC contigs for large chromosomal segments.
Archive | 1997
Aya Jakobovits; Raju Kucherlapati; Susan Klapholz; Michael Mendez; Larry Green
Nature Genetics | 1997
Michael Mendez; Larry Green; Jose Corvalan; Xiao-Chi Jia; Catherine E. Maynard-Currie; Xiao-Dong Yang; Michael Gallo; Donna M. Louie; Doris V. Lee; Karen L. Erickson; Jac Luna; Catherine M.-N. Roy; Hadi Abderrahim; Ford Kirschenbaum; Masato Noguchi; Douglas H. Smith; Atsushi Fukushima; Joanna F. Hales; Mitchell H. Finer; C. Geoffrey Davis; Krisztina M. Zsebo; Aya Jakobovits
Archive | 2008
Larry Green; Aya Jakobovits; Sue Klapholz; Raju Kucherlapati; Michael Mendez; ラジュ クチャラパティ; スー クラフォルツ; ラリー グリーン; アヤ ジャコボビッツ; マイケル メンデス
Archive | 1997
Aya Jakobovits; Raju Kucherlapati; Sue Klapholz; Michael Mendez; Larry Green