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Convenient Plasmid Vectors for Construction of Chimeric Mouse/human Antibodies

Overview
Journal FEBS Lett
Specialty Biochemistry
Date 1989 Feb 27
PMID 2920830
Citations 2
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Abstract

Chimeric antibodies composed of mouse-derived variable regions and human-derived constant regions have been developed for clinical use. However, construction of chimeric mouse/human genes in expression vectors is time-consuming work. In this study, we developed convenient vectors for construction of chimeric mouse/human antibodies. The protocols are as follows: In mouse hybridomas and B cells, most active VH and V kappa genes can be identified as rearranged bands by Southern hybridization of EcoRI- and HindIII-digested DNAs with JH and J kappa probes, respectively, and such fragments can be isolated in lambda-EcoRI and lambda-HindIII vectors, respectively. We constructed two plasmids: pSV2-HG 1 gpt contains human C gamma 1 and Ecogpt genes, and only one EcoRI site upstream of the C gamma 1 gene; pSV2-HC kappa neo contains human C kappa and neo genes, and only one HindIII site upstream of the C kappa gene. An isolated EcoRI fragment containing a VHDHJH gene and a HindIII fragment containing a V kappa J kappa gene are inserted into pSV2-HC kappa neo, respectively. Both resulting plasmid DNAs are co-transfected into SP2/0 cell, a non-Ig-secreting mouse myeloma. Transformants are selected by both mycophenolic acid and G418. With this procedure, it takes only 2 months to obtain chimeric antibodies.

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