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Construction of a human Fab phage display library from antibody repertoires of osteosarcoma patients
Carmela Dantas-Barbosa1,4, Marcelo M. Brígido2,3 and Andréa Q. Maranhão2,3
1Laboratório de Genética Molecular, Patologia, Rede Sarah de Hospitais de Reabilitação,
70330-150 Brasília, DF, Brasil
2Laboratório de Biologia Molecular, Universidade de Brasília, Campus Universitário, Asa Norte,
70910-900 Brasília, DF, Brasil
3III - Immunological Investigation Institute, CNPq
4Pós-graduação em Biologia Molecular, Departamento de Biologia Celular, Universidade de Brasília, Campus Universitário, Asa Norte, 70910-900 Brasília, DF, Brasil
Corresponding author: A.Q. Maranhão
E-mail: [email protected]
Genet. Mol. Res. 4 (2): 126-140 (2005)
Received August 2, 2004
Accepted January 7, 2005
Published April 19, 2005

ABSTRACT. Osteosarcoma is the commonest type of primary malignant bone tumor, frequently found in adolescents at sites of rapid bone growth. Despite current management protocols, up to half of the patients succumb to this disease. Moreover, there is no well-characterized molecular marker for diagnosis and prognosis. Since phage display methodology allows the selection of human antibody fragments with potential use in clinical applications, we applied this procedure to construct a recombinant Fab (antigen binding fragment) library from patients with osteosarcoma. We used peripheral blood lymphocyte total RNA from 11 osteosarcoma patients and cloned recombinant Fab representing the µ, g and k chain antibody repertoires of these individuals. The resulting library was cloned in the pComb3X vector and attained 1.45 x 108 different functional forms. BstO I fingerprinting and DNA sequencing analysis of randomly selected clones revealed the diversity of the library, demonstrating that Fab harbors Vk chains from subgroups I to V, biased towards the A27 fragment, as normally reported for the human repertoire. Analysis of the VH repertoire revealed that our library has a slight bias towards the VH4 family, instead of the usually reported VH3. This is the first description of a phage display library from osteosarcoma patients. We believe these human Fab fragments will provide a valuable tool for the study of this neoplasia and could also contribute to improvements in the diagnosis of this disease.

Key words: Phage display, Fab, Osteosarcoma, Recombinant antibody, Human antibody repertoire

 

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