- Overview of high-throughput techniques in terms of therapeutic antibody
lead finding
- Details of antibody screening assay design and case studies, along with
discussions of the relative strengths of different assay formats in therapeutic
antibody discovery
Focus
- Methods in high-throughput screening that characterize the binding and
mode of action for antibodies to target proteins
- High-throughut binding screen using FACS and homogeneous assays that
overcome problems with automating ELISA
- Binding affinity screen and epitope binning in lead finding using
high-throughput, label-free assays
The therapeutic market for monoclonal antibodies has grown fast. The rapid
screening of hybridoma and phage supernatants for antibodies is central to
efficient antibody generation. Here we introduce the homogeneous assay using a
newly developed equipment Mirrorball which is a laser-scanning fluorescence
microplate cytometer. Compared to the traditional screen method using ELISA,
this system is more robust, requires smaller sample size and is able to reliably
detect antibodies targeting low-abundance cell-surface proteins. We will discuss
how to use this technique for antibody screening in both cell-based and
bead-based assays.
During the process of therapeutic antibody discovery, in most cases
supernatants from hybridoma and phage are not suitable for functional assays.
Therefore when facing thousands of hits against target proteins subsequent to
primary binding screen, effective methods are needed to further narrow down the
number of drug candidates using biochemical assays. In this short course we will
discuss how the SPR-based label-free assays enables screening of antibody
binding characteristics; how to use these assays to characterize the epitope
binding regions for antibody panels, facilitate their organization into epitope
groups or bins and how antibody on/off rates data are used to guide clone
selection and antibody engineering studies.
短期培訓課程II : 腫瘤藥物發現中的細胞分析測驗方法的開發
沈余紅博士
上海藥明康德新藥開發有限公司,腫瘤學部,高級主任
Recent advancesof targeted therapies havegreatly shifted the drug discovery
paradigm. With the much better understanding of the molecular and cellular
mechanisms of tumor formation and cancer as a disease, reliable cell based
assays which truthfully reflect the mechanism of the targets and assess
phenotypes most directly associated with the target mechanism have become a
critical component of oncology drug discovery for both new chemical entities and
biologics. Especially in small molecule drug discovery, once the targets are
validated, new chemical entities are screened in a variety of activity assays to
determine the effectiveness of the chemical entities. These assays are often
organized with the flow of the primary biochemical assays to measure activity
against the target of interest, followed by the cell based assays to determine
the effectiveness of the compounds to the specific targets or to the cell
functions. These cell-based assays are highly demanded and valuable to predict
in vivo efficacy of the compounds and guide in vivo studies.
Compared with biochemical assays, cell based assays involve many more
variables. Thus many parameters such as assay formats and conditions including
cell line selection, cell growth conditions, other pathway interference etc.
need to be carefully evaluated and controlled to establish reliable assays. In
this short course, we will address the challenges and guiding principles of
setting up reliable and robust cell based assays through some case study
examples. We will focus on discussing some of the highly used mechanism based
cell based assays such as ELISA, In-Cell Western or AlphaScreen, as well as some
of the widely used oncology cell based phenotypic assays such as viability and
proliferation, apoptosis assays, colony formation assays, migration and
angiogenesis assays etc.