Publications by authors named "Amissi Sadiki"

Article Synopsis
  • Antibody therapies for treating animal diseases, particularly for pain in osteoarthritic cats and dogs, are gaining traction, signaling potential advancements in veterinary medicine.
  • Goats are important economically for their milk, meat, and hide, making it essential to develop antibody therapies to protect them, with goat antibodies playing a key role.
  • A new method has been developed for site-specific conjugation of native goat antibodies, enhancing their therapeutic applications without compromising their antigen binding capabilities, representing a significant advancement in the field.
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Major challenges to chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cell therapies include uncontrolled immune activity, off-tumor toxicities and tumor heterogeneity. To overcome these challenges, we engineered CARs directed against small molecules. By conjugating the same small molecule to distinct tumor-targeting antibodies, we show that small molecule specific-CAR T cells can be redirected to different tumor antigens.

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Traditionally, non-specific chemical conjugation, such as acylation of amines on lysine or alkylation of thiols on cysteines, are widely used; however, they have several shortcomings. First, the lack of site-specificity results in heterogeneous products and irreproducible processes. Second, potential modifications near the complementarity determining region (CDR) may reduce binding affinity and specificity.

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Photosensitizer (PS)-antibody conjugates (photoimmunoconjugates, PICs) enable cancer cell-targeted photodynamic therapy (PDT). Nonspecific chemical bioconjugation is widely used to synthesize PICs but gives rise to several shortcomings. The conjugates are heterogeneous, and the process is not easily reproducible.

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Dynamic photoswitches in proteins that impart spatial and temporal control are important to manipulate and study biotic and abiotic processes. Nonetheless, approaches to install these switches into proteins site-specifically are limited. Herein we describe a novel site-specific method to generate photoremovable protein conjugates.

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The intrinsically disordered protein (IDP) stathmin plays an important regulatory role in cytoskeletal maintenance through its helical binding to tubulin and microtubules. However, it lacks a stable fold in the absence of its binding partner. Although stathmin has been a focus of research over the past two decades, the solution-phase conformational dynamics of this IDP are poorly understood.

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