Publications by authors named "Ing-Chien Chen"

Immunoassays based on sandwich immuno-complexes of capture and detection antibodies simultaneously binding to the target analytes have been powerful technologies in molecular analyses. Recent developments in single molecule detection technologies enable the detection limit of the sandwich immunoassays approaching femtomolar (10 M), driving the needs of developing sensitive and specific antibodies for ever-increasingly broad applications in detecting and quantifying biomarkers. The key components underlying the sandwich immunoassays are antibody-based affinity reagents, for which the conventional sources are mono- or poly-clonal antibodies from immunized animals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - Antibodies protect the immune system by recognizing diverse antigens, but understanding how their amino acid sequences affect their interactions remains difficult.
  • - Researchers created synthetic antibody libraries using machine learning to enhance the recognition capabilities of antibodies, resulting in variants with improved properties compared to natural human antibodies.
  • - The synthetic antibodies showed high specificity and affinity for target antigens without needing additional refinement, suggesting that computational designs could lead to better antibodies for medical treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

HER2-ECD (human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 - extracellular domain) is a prominent therapeutic target validated for treating HER2-positive breast and gastric cancer, but HER2-specific therapeutic options for treating advanced gastric cancer remain limited. We have developed antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), comprising IgG1 linked via valine-citrulline to monomethyl auristatin E, with potential to treat HER2-positive gastric cancer in humans. The antibodies optimally selected from the ADC discovery platform, which was developed to discover antibody candidates suitable for immunoconjugates from synthetic antibody libraries designed using antibody-antigen interaction principles, were demonstrated to be superior immunoconjugate targeting modules in terms of efficacy and off-target toxicity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Influenza A virus outbreaks are serious threats to human health, and using recombinant neutralizing antibodies could help combat these infections.
  • Researchers developed a high-throughput platform that creates synthetic antibodies without needing prior exposure to the virus, enabling the production of effective IAV-neutralizing IgGs.
  • The synthetic antibodies share similarities with natural protective antibodies and could be adapted to address other viral infections, proving valuable in pandemic preparedness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Broadly neutralizing antibodies developed from the IGHV1-69 germline gene are known to bind to the stem region of hemagglutinin in diverse influenza viruses but the sequence determinants for the antigen recognition, including neutralization potency and binding affinity, are not clearly understood. Such understanding could inform designs of synthetic antibody libraries targeting the stem epitope on hemagglutinin, leading to artificially designed antibodies that are functionally advantageous over antibodies from natural antibody repertoires. In this work, the sequence space of the complementarity determining regions of a broadly neutralizing antibody (F10) targeting the stem epitope on the hemagglutinin of a strain of H1N1 influenza virus was systematically explored; the elucidated antibody-hemagglutinin recognition principles were used to design a phage-displayed antibody library, which was then used to discover neutralizing antibodies against another strain of H1N1 virus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Humoral immunity against diverse pathogens is rapidly elicited from natural antibody repertoires of limited complexity. But the organizing principles underlying the antibody repertoires that facilitate this immunity are not well-understood. We used HER2 as a model immunogen and reverse-engineered murine antibody response through constructing an artificial antibody library encoded with rudimentary sequence and structural characteristics learned from high throughput sequencing of antibody variable domains.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Protein structural stability and biological functionality are dictated by the formation of intradomain cores and interdomain interfaces, but the intricate sequence-structure-function interrelationships in the packing of protein cores and interfaces remain difficult to elucidate due to the intractability of enumerating all packing possibilities and assessing the consequences of all the variations. In this work, groups of β strand residues of model antibody variable domains were randomized with saturated mutagenesis and the functional variants were selected for high-throughput sequencing and high-throughput thermal stability measurements. The results show that the sequence preferences of the intradomain hydrophobic core residues are strikingly flexible among hydrophobic residues, implying that these residues are coupled indirectly with antigen binding through energetic stabilization of the protein structures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The study uses the antibody-VEGF interaction to demonstrate that amino acid preferences at the antibody-antigen interface can be understood through 3D atomic distributions from protein structure databases, applying machine learning to make predictions.
  • * A methodology was developed that can predict amino acid preferences for specific interactions with reasonable accuracy, offering a potential alternative to traditional antibody engineering that relies on animal immune systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phage-displayed single chain variable fragment (scFv) libraries are powerful tools in antibody engineering. Disulfide-stabilized scFv (sc-dsFv) with an interface disulfide bond is structure-wise more stable than the corresponding scFv. A set of recently discovered signal sequences replacing the wild type (pelB) signal peptidase cleavage site in the c-region has been shown to be effective in rescuing the expression of sc-dsFv libraries on the phage surface.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) have been well documented to be involved in diverse aspects of biotic and abiotic stresses, especially detoxification processes. Whether they regulate plant development remains unclear. Here, we report on our isolation by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction of a plant GST, AtGSTU17, from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) and demonstrate that its expression is regulated by multiple photoreceptors, especially phytochrome A (phyA) under all light conditions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phage-displayed single chain variable fragment (scFv) libraries have been powerful tools in antibody engineering. But the scFv structures are frequently unstable due to the dissociation of the dimeric interface between the two variable domains. One solution is the sc-dsFv construct, where the single chain variable domain fragment is stabilized with an additional interface disulfide bond, leading to stable and homogeneous dimeric interface for the sc-dsFv structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Phage display of antibody fragments from natural or synthetic antibody libraries with the single chain constructs combining the variable fragments (scFv) has been one of the most prominent technologies in antibody engineering. However, the nature of the artificial single chain constructs results in unstable proteins expressed on the phage surface or as soluble proteins secreted in the bacterial culture medium. The stability of the variable domain structures can be enhanced with interdomain disulfide bond, but the single chain disulfide-stabilized constructs (sc-dsFv) have yet to be established as a feasible format for bacterial phage display due to diminishing expression levels on the phage surface in known phage display systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Far-red (FR) insensitive 219 (FIN219) was previously shown to be involved in phytochrome A-mediated FR light signaling. To further understand its function and regulatory relation with other light-signaling components, a yeast two-hybrid approach was used to isolate FIN219-interacting partners. Here, we demonstrate that FIN219-interacting protein 1 (FIP1) interacts with FIN219 in vitro and in vivo and is composed of 217 amino acids that belong to the tau class of the large glutathione S-transferase gene family.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF