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  2. Phage display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phage_display

    Phage display cycle. 1) fusion proteins for a viral coat protein + the gene to be evolved (typically an antibody fragment) are expressed in bacteriophage. 2) the library of phage are washed over an immobilised target. 3) the remaining high-affinity binders are used to infect bacteria. 4) the genes encoding the high-affinity binders are isolated.

  3. mRNA display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MRNA_display

    The synthesis of an mRNA display library starts from the synthesis of a DNA library. A DNA library for any protein or small peptide of interest can be synthesized by solid-phase synthesis followed by PCR amplification. Usually, each member of this DNA library has a T7 RNA polymerase transcription site and a ribosomal binding site at the 5’ end.

  4. Biopanning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biopanning

    The end result is the peptides produced by bacteriophage are specific. The resulting filamentous phages can infect gram-negative bacteria once again to produce phage libraries. The cycle can occur many times resulting with strong affinity binding peptides to the target.

  5. PhagesDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PhagesDB

    Plaque exhibiting bacterial lawn with clearings made by Artharobacter phage GantcherGoblin.. The Actinobacteriophage database, more commonly known as PhagesDB, is an interactive, comprehensive, database-backed website that collects and shares information related to the discovery, characterization and genomics of viruses that typically infect Actinobacterial hosts.

  6. Chemically linked Fab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemically_linked_Fab

    They are fragments antigen-binding (Fab or Fab') of two different monoclonal antibodies and are linked by chemical means like a thioether. [1] [2] Typically, one of the Fabs binds to a tumour antigen (such as CD30) and the other to a protein on the surface of an immune cell, for example an Fc receptor on a macrophage. In this way, tumour cells ...

  7. Fragment antigen-binding region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fragment_antigen-binding...

    The fragment antigen-binding region (Fab region) is a region on an antibody that binds to antigens. It is composed of one constant and one variable domain of each of the heavy and the light chain . The variable domain contains the paratope (the antigen-binding site), comprising a set of complementarity-determining regions , at the amino ...

  8. Ribosome display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ribosome_display

    Ribosome display begins with a native library of DNA sequences coding for polypeptides. [2] Each sequence is transcribed, and then translated in vitro into a polypeptide. . However, the DNA library coding for a particular library of binding proteins is genetically fused to a spacer sequence lacking a stop codon before its

  9. T7 RNA polymerase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T7_RNA_polymerase

    In biotechnology applications, T7 RNA polymerase is commonly used to transcribe DNA that has been cloned into vectors that have two (different) phage promoters (e.g., T7 and T3, or T7 and SP6) in opposite orientation. RNA can be selectively synthesized from either strand of the insert DNA with the different polymerases.