Yvonne Stark
MorphoSys
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yvonne Stark.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008
Christine Rothe; Stefanie Urlinger; Corinna Löhning; Josef Prassler; Yvonne Stark; Ute Jäger; Bernd Hubner; Michael Bardroff; Ingrid Pradel; Melanie Boss; Renate Bittlingmaier; Tschimegma Bataa; Christian Frisch; Bodo Brocks; Annemarie Honegger; Margit Urban
This article describes the generation of the Human Combinatorial Antibody Library HuCAL GOLD. HuCAL GOLD is a synthetic human Fab library based on the HuCAL concept with all six complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) diversified according to the sequence and length variability of naturally rearranged human antibodies. The human antibody repertoire was analyzed in-depth, and individual CDR libraries were designed and generated for each CDR and each antibody family. Trinucleotide mixtures were used to synthesize the CDR libraries in order to ensure a high quality within HuCAL GOLD, and a beta-lactamase selection system was employed to eliminate frame-shifted clones after successive cloning of the CDR libraries. With these methods, a large, high-quality library with more than 10 billion functional Fab fragments was achieved. By using CysDisplay, the antibody fragments are displayed on the tip of the phage via a disulfide bridge between the phage coat protein pIII and the heavy chain of the antibody fragment. Efficient elution of specific phages is possible by adding reducing agents. HuCAL GOLD was challenged with a variety of different antigens and proved to be a reliable source of high-affinity human antibodies with best affinities in the picomolar range, thus functioning as an excellent source of antibodies for research, diagnostic, and therapeutic applications. Furthermore, the data presented in this article demonstrate that CysDisplay is a robust and broadly applicable display technology even for high-throughput applications.
mAbs | 2013
Thomas Tiller; Ingrid Schuster; Dorothée Deppe; Katja Siegers; Ralf Strohner; Tanja Herrmann; Marion Berenguer; Dominique Poujol; Jennifer Stehle; Yvonne Stark; Martin Heßling; Daniela Daubert; Karin Felderer; Stefan Kaden; Johanna Kölln; Markus Enzelberger; Stefanie Urlinger
This report describes the design, generation and testing of Ylanthia, a fully synthetic human Fab antibody library with 1.3E+11 clones. Ylanthia comprises 36 fixed immunoglobulin (Ig) variable heavy (VH)/variable light (VL) chain pairs, which cover a broad range of canonical complementarity-determining region (CDR) structures. The variable Ig heavy and Ig light (VH/VL) chain pairs were selected for biophysical characteristics favorable to manufacturing and development. The selection process included multiple parameters, e.g., assessment of protein expression yield, thermal stability and aggregation propensity in fragment antigen binding (Fab) and IgG1 formats, and relative Fab display rate on phage. The framework regions are fixed and the diversified CDRs were designed based on a systematic analysis of a large set of rearranged human antibody sequences. Care was taken to minimize the occurrence of potential posttranslational modification sites within the CDRs. Phage selection was performed against various antigens and unique antibodies with excellent biophysical properties were isolated. Our results confirm that quality can be built into an antibody library by prudent selection of unmodified, fully human VH/VL pairs as scaffolds.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2011
Josef Prassler; Stefanie Thiel; Catrin Pracht; Andrea Polzer; Solveig Peters; Marion Bauer; Stephanie Nörenberg; Yvonne Stark; Johanna Kölln; Andreas Popp; Stefanie Urlinger; Markus Enzelberger
This article describes the design of HuCAL (human combinatorial antibody library) PLATINUM, an optimized, second-generation, synthetic human Fab antibody library with six trinucleotide-randomized complementarity-determining regions (CDRs). Major improvements regarding the optimized antibody library sequence space were implemented. Sequence space optimization is considered a multistep process that includes the analysis of unproductive antibody sequences in order to, for example, avoid motifs such as potential N-glycosylation sites, which are undesirable in antibody production. Gene optimization has been used to improve expression of the antibody master genes in the library context. As a result, full-length IgGs derived from the library show both significant improvements in expression levels and less undesirable glycosylation sites when compared to the previous HuCAL GOLD library. Additionally, in-depth analysis of sequences from public databases revealed that diversity of CDR-H3 is a function of loop length. Based upon this analysis, the relatively uniform diversification strategy used in the CDR-H3s of the previous HuCAL libraries was changed to a length-dependent design, which replicates the natural amino acid distribution of CDR-H3 in the human repertoire. In a side-by-side comparison of HuCAL GOLD and HuCAL PLATINUM, the new library concept led to isolation of about fourfold more unique sequences and to a higher number of high-affinity antibodies. In the majority of HuCAL PLATINUM projects, 100-300 antibodies each having different CDR-H3s are obtained against each antigen. This increased diversity pool has been shown to significantly benefit functional antibody profiling and screening for superior biophysical properties.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008
Roman Hillig; Stefanie Urlinger; Jörg Fanghänel; Bodo Brocks; Cornelia Haenel; Yvonne Stark; Detlev Sülzle; Dmitri I. Svergun; Siegfried Baesler; Guido Malawski; Dieter Moosmayer; Andreas Menrad; Michael Schirner; Kai Licha
Molecular interactions between near-IR fluorescent probes and specific antibodies may be exploited to generate novel smart probes for diagnostic imaging. Using a new phage display technology, we developed such antibody Fab fragments with subnanomolar binding affinity for tetrasulfocyanine, a near-IR in vivo imaging agent. Unexpectedly, some Fabs induced redshifts of the dye absorption peak of up to 44 nm. This is the largest shift reported for a biological system so far. Crystal structure determination and absorption spectroscopy in the crystal in combination with microcalorimetry and small-angle X-ray scattering in solution revealed that the redshift is triggered by formation of a Fab dimer, with tetrasulfocyanine being buried in a fully closed protein cavity within the dimer interface. The derived principle of shifting the absorption peak of a symmetric dye via packaging within a Fab dimer interface may be transferred to other diagnostic fluorophores, opening the way towards smart imaging probes that change their wavelength upon interaction with an antibody.
Acta Crystallographica Section F-structural Biology and Crystallization Communications | 2007
Roman Hillig; Siegfried Baesler; Stefanie Urlinger; Yvonne Stark; Susanne Bauer; Volker Badock; Martina Huber; Inke Bahr; Michael Schirner; Kai Licha
Tetrasulfocyanine (TSC) has been described as a fluorescent probe for tumour imaging. The complex of TSC and the Fab antibody fragment MOR03268 has been crystallized in three different crystal forms. MOR03268 was identified from the HuCAL GOLD library and further optimized to bind TSC with high affinity (Kd = 0.6 nM). For two of the three crystal forms (forms 1 and 2), data sets could be collected to 2.8 and 2.85 A resolution, respectively. Form 1 belongs to space group I222, with unit-cell parameters a = 72, b = 99, c = 154 A. Form 2 belongs to space group P4(3)2(1)2, with unit-cell parameters a = b = 77, c = 379 A. Form 3 only diffracted to 8 A and was not analyzed further. Molecular-replacement solutions for forms 1 and 2 were found and rebuilding and refinement is in progress. Form 1 contains one Fab molecule per asymmetric unit, while form 2 harbours two. Judging from the green colour of the crystals, both forms contain the Fab molecule bound to the green TSC dye and in both the hydrolysis-sensitive dye molecule is protected from degradation for several weeks to months. The structures should reveal the molecular basis of the high-affinity recognition of TSC by the Fab molecule MOR03268.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2017
Yvonne Stark; Sophie Venet; Annika Schmid
Phage display has emerged as one of the leading technologies for the selection of highly specific monoclonal antibodies, offering a number of advantages over traditional methods of antibody generation. While there are various possibilities to conduct phage display (e.g., solution panning, solid-phase panning), whole cell panning is an elegant way to present membrane embedded target antigens in their natural environment and conformation to antibody-bearing phages. Here, a whole cell panning procedure using a Fab-based antibody library including primary cell based screening for selectivity is described.
Archive | 2011
Stefanie Urlinger; Thomas Tiller; Ingrid Schuster; Yvonne Stark
Archive | 2003
Josef Prassler; Yvonne Stark
Archive | 2008
Josef Prassler; Yvonne Stark
Archive | 2011
Josef Prassler; David Ott; Stefanie Thiel; Yvonne Stark; Ute Keck; Thomas Pietzonka; Hilmar Ebersbach