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Dive into the research topics where Steven H. Bass is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven H. Bass.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Directed evolution of gene-shuffled IFN-α molecules with activity profiles tailored for treatment of chronic viral diseases

Amy Brideau-Andersen; Xiaojian Huang; Siu-Chi Chang Sun; Teddy Chen; Diane Stark; Ian J. Sas; Linda Zadik; Glenn Dawes; Douglas Guptill; Robert McCord; Sridhar Govindarajan; Ajoy Roy; Shumin Yang; Judy Gao; Yong Hong Chen; Niels Jørgen Ø. Skartved; Annette K. Pedersen; David Lin; Christopher P. Locher; Indrani Rebbapragada; Anne Dam Jensen; Steven H. Bass; Torben Lauesgaard Nissen; Sridhar Viswanathan; Graham R. Foster; Julian A. Symons; Phillip A. Patten

Type I IFNs are unusually pleiotropic cytokines that bind to a single heterodimeric receptor and have potent antiviral, antiproliferative, and immune modulatory activities. The diverse effects of the type I IFNs are of differential therapeutic importance; in cancer therapy, an enhanced antiproliferative effect may be beneficial, whereas in the therapy of viral infections (such as hepatitis B and hepatitis C), the antiproliferative effects lead to dose limiting bone marrow suppression. Studies have shown that various members of the natural IFN-α family and engineered variants, such as IFN-con1, vary in the ratios between various IFN-mediated cellular activities. We used DNA shuffling to explore and confirm the hypothesis that one could simultaneously increase the antiviral and Th1-inducing activity and decrease the antiproliferative activity. We report IFN-α hybrids wherein the ratio of antiviral:antiproliferative and Th1-inducing: antiproliferative potencies are markedly increased with respsect to IFN-con1 (75- and 80-fold, respectively). A four-residue motif that overlaps with the IFNAR1 binding site and is derived by cross breeding with a pseudogene contributes significantly to this phenotype. These IFN-αs have an activity profile that may result in an improved therapeutic index and, consequently, better clinical efficacy for the treatment of chronic viral diseases such as hepatitis B virus, human papilloma virus, HIV, or chronic hepatitis C.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2016

ASP2408 and ASP2409, novel CTLA4-Ig variants with CD86-selective ligand binding activity and improved immunosuppressive potency, created by directed evolution

Shinsuke Oshima; Erik E. Karrer; Madan M. Paidhungat; Margaret Neighbors; Steven J. Chapin; Rong A. Fan; Margaret A. Reed; Kuoting Wu; Clifford Wong; Yonghong Chen; Marc Whitlow; Francisco A. Anderson; Rujuta A. Bam; Qian Zhang; Brent Larsen; Sridhar Viswanathan; Bruce H. Devens; Steven H. Bass; Yasuyuki Higashi

The CTLA4-Ig therapeutics abatacept and belatacept inhibit CD28-mediated T cell activation by binding CD80 (B7-1) and CD86 (B7-2) co-stimulatory ligands. Both compounds preferentially bind CD80, yet CD86 has been implicated as the dominant co-stimulatory ligand. Using directed evolution methods, novel CTLA4-Ig variants were created with selective CD86 binding affinity, a property that confers increased immunosuppressive potency and potentially improved efficacy and safety profiles. Relative to abatacept (wild-type CTLA4-Ig), ASP2408 and ASP2409 have 83-fold and 220-fold enhanced binding affinity to CD86 while retaining 1.5-fold and 5.6-fold enhanced binding affinity to CD80, respectively. Improvements in CD86 binding affinity correlates with increased immunosuppressive potencyin vitroandin vivo Our results highlight the power of directed evolution methods to obtain non-intuitive protein engineering solutions and represent the first examples of CD86-selective CTLA4-Ig compounds that have entered clinical trials.


Archive | 2000

Oligonucloetide mediated nucleic acid recombination

Andreas Crameri; Willem P. C. Stemmer; Jeremy Minshull; Steven H. Bass; Mark Welch; John E. Ness; Claes Gustafsson; Phillip A. Patten


Archive | 2000

Evolution of whole cells and organisms by recursive sequence recombination

Stephen Delcardayre; Matthew Tobin; Willem P. C. Stemmer; Jon E. Ness; Jeremy Minshull; Phillip A. Patten; Venkiteswaran Subramanian; Linda A. Castle; Claus Krebber; Steven H. Bass


Archive | 1999

Antigen library immunization

Juha Punnonen; Steven H. Bass; Robert G. Whalen; Russell Howard; Willem P. C. Stemmer


Archive | 2001

INTEGRATED SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR DIVERSITY GENERATION AND SCREENING

Steven H. Bass; Simon Christopher Davis; Phillip A. Patten; Matthew Tobin; Jeremy Minshull; Mark Welch; Claus Gustafsson; Brian Carr; Stephan J. Jenne; Sun Ai Raillard; Andreas Crameri; Willem P. C. Stemmer; Robin Emig; Pascal Longchamp; Stanley Goldman; Lorraine J. Giver; Joseph A. Affholter


Archive | 2000

Antibody diversity generation

Erik E. Karrer; Steven H. Bass; Robert G. Whalen; Phillip A. Patten


Archive | 2011

Immunosuppressive polypeptides and nucleic acids

Erik E. Karrer; Madan M. Paidhungat; Steven H. Bass; Margaret Neighbors; Juha Punnonen; Steven J. Chapin


Archive | 2000

Flavivirus and alphavirus recombinant antigen libraries

Juha Punnonen; Steven H. Bass; Robert G. Whalen; Russell Howard; Willem P. C. Stemmer


Archive | 2000

Polynucleotides encoding flavivirus and alphavirus multivalent antigenic polypeptides

Juha Punnonen; Steven H. Bass; Robert G. Whalen; Russell Howard; Willem P. C. Stemmer

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Mark Welch

Mississippi State University

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