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  2. Phage display - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phage_display

    Antibody phage display was later used by Carlos F. Barbas at The Scripps Research Institute to create synthetic human antibody libraries, a principle first patented in 1990 by Breitling and coworkers (Patent CA 2035384), thereby allowing human antibodies to be created in vitro from synthetic diversity elements.

  3. John McCafferty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_McCafferty

    John McCafferty is a British scientist, one of the founders of Cambridge Antibody Technology alongside Sir Gregory Winter and David Chiswell. He is well known as one of the inventors of scFv antibody fragment phage display, [1] a technology that revolutionised the monoclonal antibody drug discovery.

  4. iRGD peptides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IRGD_peptides

    Internalizing RGD (iRGD) peptides are a class of 9-amino acid cyclic peptides containing an RGD sequence, which undergo internalization as discussed below. The prototypic iRGD peptide, shown in the image on the right (sequence: CRGDKGPDC; CAS 1392278-76-0), was originally identified in an in vivo screening of phage display libraries in tumor-bearing mice. [1]

  5. Cambridge Antibody Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambridge_Antibody_Technology

    CAT's proprietary antibody phage display library for the discovery, development and potential commercialisation of human monoclonal antibodies was licensed to Immunex, in return for a licence fee. This deal was expanded in May 2001 where CAT shared more of the risk of drug development – a so-called "profit-sharing" deal.

  6. Biopanning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biopanning

    It involves conjugating the phage library to the desired target. This procedure is termed panning. It utilizes the binding interactions so that only specific peptides presented by bacteriophage are bound to the target. For example, selecting antibody presented by bacteriophage with coated antigen in microtiter plates.

  7. Humanized antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanized_antibody

    There are technologies that completely avoid the use of mice or other non-human mammals in the process of discovering antibodies for human therapy. Examples of such systems include various "display" methods (primarily phage display) as well as methods that exploit the elevated B-cell levels that occur during a human immune response.

  8. Aptamer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aptamer

    While antibodies often rely on animals for initial discovery, as well as for production in the case of polyclonal antibodies, both the selection and production of aptamers is typically animal-free. However, phage display methods allow for selection of antibodies in vitro , followed by production from a monoclonal cell line, avoiding the use of ...

  9. Single-domain antibody - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-domain_antibody

    A single-domain antibody can be obtained by immunization of dromedaries, camels, llamas, alpacas or sharks with the desired antigen and subsequent isolation of the mRNA coding for the variable region (V NAR and V H H) of heavy-chain antibodies. Large phage displayed V NAR and V H H single domain libraries were established from nurse sharks [17 ...