Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals

Infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is cleared spontaneously in only 20% of cases with the majority of individuals developing a chronic infection. This discrepancy in disease outcome is incompletely understood but current understanding of the immune response to HCV suggests that rapid induction...

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Main Author: Edwards, Victoria C.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2012
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12774/
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author Edwards, Victoria C.
author_facet Edwards, Victoria C.
author_sort Edwards, Victoria C.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is cleared spontaneously in only 20% of cases with the majority of individuals developing a chronic infection. This discrepancy in disease outcome is incompletely understood but current understanding of the immune response to HCV suggests that rapid induction of a broadly neutralising antibody (nAb) response leads to resolution of acute infection. The majority of nAb identified target the envelope glycoproteins, particularly E2, and most appear to inhibit binding of E2 to the cellular receptor CD81. Antibodies targeting other interactions, such as those with the receptor CLDN or the fusion determinant, are underrepresented in the repertoire of anti-HCV antibodies. However, the antibody discovery process may have been biased by the nature of the assays used. Therefore new assays are needed to enable the discovery and characterisation of antibodies in an unbiased manner. To facilitate this, a novel insect cell display library was developed for mapping antibody-binding epitopes. Cells expressing specific E2 mutants provided the necessary proof-of-principle that loss of antibody binding could be detected in this system before a library expressing randomly mutated E2 was developed. Sorting experiments demonstrated that single cells could be isolated and enriched based on loss of antibody binding. Secondly, a method for characterising the immunoglobulin (Ig) genes of HCV infected patients was developed; Ig genes were isolated from small numbers of B cells and the sequences analysed. Finally, a patient cohort was studied with a view to investigating the evolution of the antibody response during early infection. The unreliable nature of the samples prevented such analysis; however a DNA fingerprinting method of testing the origin and relatedness of serum samples was developed. This will improve the reliability of future studies. Together these methods provide a work model for the assessment of samples and the isolation and characterisation of antibodies.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:30:45Z
publishDate 2012
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spelling nottingham-127742025-02-28T11:21:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12774/ Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals Edwards, Victoria C. Infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV) is cleared spontaneously in only 20% of cases with the majority of individuals developing a chronic infection. This discrepancy in disease outcome is incompletely understood but current understanding of the immune response to HCV suggests that rapid induction of a broadly neutralising antibody (nAb) response leads to resolution of acute infection. The majority of nAb identified target the envelope glycoproteins, particularly E2, and most appear to inhibit binding of E2 to the cellular receptor CD81. Antibodies targeting other interactions, such as those with the receptor CLDN or the fusion determinant, are underrepresented in the repertoire of anti-HCV antibodies. However, the antibody discovery process may have been biased by the nature of the assays used. Therefore new assays are needed to enable the discovery and characterisation of antibodies in an unbiased manner. To facilitate this, a novel insect cell display library was developed for mapping antibody-binding epitopes. Cells expressing specific E2 mutants provided the necessary proof-of-principle that loss of antibody binding could be detected in this system before a library expressing randomly mutated E2 was developed. Sorting experiments demonstrated that single cells could be isolated and enriched based on loss of antibody binding. Secondly, a method for characterising the immunoglobulin (Ig) genes of HCV infected patients was developed; Ig genes were isolated from small numbers of B cells and the sequences analysed. Finally, a patient cohort was studied with a view to investigating the evolution of the antibody response during early infection. The unreliable nature of the samples prevented such analysis; however a DNA fingerprinting method of testing the origin and relatedness of serum samples was developed. This will improve the reliability of future studies. Together these methods provide a work model for the assessment of samples and the isolation and characterisation of antibodies. 2012-12-11 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12774/1/Victoria_Edwards_Thesis.pdf Edwards, Victoria C. (2012) Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Edwards, Victoria C.
Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title_full Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title_fullStr Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title_full_unstemmed Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title_short Development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from Hepatitis C virus infected individuals
title_sort development of techniques for the isolation and characterisation of human monoclonal antibodies from hepatitis c virus infected individuals
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12774/