We describe a strategy for producing human monoclonal antibodies in mice by introducing large segments of the human heavy and kappa 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.
We have successfully generated and characterized a stable packaging cell line for HIV-1-based vectors. To allow safe production of vector, a minimal packaging construct carrying only the coding sequences of the HIV-1 gag-pol, tat, and rev genes was stably introduced into 293G cells under the control of a Tet(o) minimal promoter. 293G cells express the chimeric Tet(R)/VP16 trans-activator and contain a tetracycline-regulated vesicular stomatitis virus protein G (VSV-G) envelope gene. When the cells were grown in the presence of tetracycline the expression of both HIV-1-derived and VSV-derived packaging functions was suppressed. On induction, approximately 50 ng/ml/24 hr of Gag p24 equivalent of vector was obtained. After introduction of the transfer vector by serial infection, vector could be collected for several days with a transduction efficiency similar or superior to that of vector produced by transient transfection both for dividing and growth-arrested cells. The vector could be effectively concentrated to titers reaching 10(9) transducing units/ml and allowed for efficient delivery and stable expression of a GFP transgene in the mouse brain. The packaging cell line and all vector producer clones described here were shown to be free from replication-competent recombinants, and from recombinants between packaging and vector constructs that transfer the viral gag-pol genes. The packaging cell line and the assays developed will advance lentiviral vectors toward the stringent requirements of clinical applications.
The CellKey (MDS Sciex, South San Francisco, CA) system enables comprehensive pharmacological evaluation of cell surface receptors, including G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) and tyrosine kinase receptors, using adherent and suspension cell lines and primary cells. A unique application enabled by the ability of the CellKey system to reliably quantify activation of endogenous receptors is receptor panning. This application allows investigators to easily screen disease-relevant cell types for functionally active target receptors by treating cells with a panel of receptor-specific ligands. Receptor panning of multiple cell types including Chinese hamster ovary, human embryonic kidney 293, HeLa, U-937, U-2 OS, and TE671 cells resulted in the identification of many functionally active, differently coupled endogenous GPCRs, some of which have not been previously documented in the literature. Upon detecting GPCR activation in live cells, unique cellular dielectric spectroscopy (CDS) response profiles are generated within minutes that reflect the signaling pathways utilized and have been shown to be characteristic of Gs, Gq, and Gi GPCRs. The fact that the CDS response profiles are predictive of the G-protein coupling mechanism of the receptor was demonstrated by using examples of subtype-selective agonists/antagonists to identify the subtypes of the endogenous histamine and beta-adrenergic receptors expressed in U-2 OS cells. A direct correlation is shown between receptor subtype G-protein coupling and CDS response profile. In addition, complex pharmacology, including detection of partial agonism and Schild analysis for endogenous receptors, is presented. The CellKey system allows investigators to conduct studies using endogenously expressed receptors to generate data that are physiologically relevant and in disease context.
The past decade has seen a number of significant changes in identifying higher quality lead compounds earlier in the drug discovery process. Cell-based assay technologies yielding high-content information have emerged to achieve this goal. Although most of these systems are based on fluorescence detection, this article describes the development and application of an innovative cellular assay technology based on radio frequency spectrometry and bioimpedance measurements. Using this technique, the authors have discovered a link between cellular bioimpedance changes and receptor-mediated signal transduction events. By performing dielectric spectroscopy of cells across a spectrum of frequencies (1 KHz to 110 MHz), a series of receptorspecific, frequency-dependent impedance patterns is collected. These raw data patterns are used to determine the identity of the cellular receptor-signaling pathway being tested and to quantify stimulation endpoints and kinetics. The authors describe the application of this technology to the analysis of ligand-induced cellular responses mediated by the 3 major classes of Gprotein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and protein tyrosine kinase receptors. This single assay platform can be used with ease to monitor G s , G i , and G q GPCRs without the need for chimeric or promiscuous G-proteins, fluorophors, or tagged proteins. In contrast to other methods of monitoring cellular signal transduction, this approach provides high information content in a sim-
A chimeric immune receptor consisting of an extracellular antigen-binding domain derived from the CC49 humanized single-chain antibody, linked to the CD3zeta signaling domain of the T cell receptor, was generated (CC49-zeta). This receptor binds to TAG-72, a mucin antigen expressed by most human adenocarcinomas. CC49-zeta was expressed in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells and induced cytokine production on stimulation. Human T cells expressing CC49-zeta recognized and killed tumor cell lines and primary tumor cells expressing TAG-72. CC49-zeta T cells did not mediate bystander killing of TAG-72-negative cells. In addition, CC49-zeta T cells not only killed FasL-positive tumor cells in vitro and in vivo, but also survived in their presence, and were immunoprotective in intraperitoneal and subcutaneous murine tumor xenograft models with TAG-72-positive human tumor cells. Finally, receptor-positive T cells were still effective in killing TAG-72-positive targets in the presence of physiological levels of soluble TAG-72, and did not induce killing of TAG-72-negative cells under the same conditions. This approach is being currently being utilized in a phase I clinical trial for the treatment of colon cancer.
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