AI Article Synopsis

  • Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) are highly potent natural toxins, and neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) offer an effective immunotherapy against them, with hybridoma technology being the go-to method for MAb production.
  • In this study, researchers isolated plasmablasts and activated memory B-cells from a donor who had received BoNT/A injections, then fused them with a cell line to create hybridomas that produce native human MAbs specific to BoNT/A.
  • Three hybridomas were successfully created, one of which (1B9) not only binds effectively to BoNT/A but also inhibits its catalytic activity, showing promise for effective treatment even in cases of low

Article Abstract

Introduction: Botulinum neurotoxins (BoNTs) cause botulism and are the most potent natural toxins known. Immunotherapy with neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) is considered to be the most effective immediate response to BoNT exposure. Hybridoma technology remains the preferred method for producing MAbs with naturally paired immunoglobulin genes and with preserved innate functions of immune cells. The affinity-matured human antibody repertoire may be ideal as a source for antibody therapeutics against BoNTs. In an effort to develop novel BoNT type A (BoNT/A) immunotherapeutics, sorted by flow cytometry plasmablasts and activated memory B cells from a donor repeatedly injected with BoNT/A for aesthetic botulinum therapy could be used due to obtain hybridomas producing native antibodies.

Methods: Plasmablasts and activated memory B-cells were isolated from whole blood collected 7 days after BoNT/A injection and sorted by flow cytometry. The sorted cells were then electrofused with the K6H6/B5 cell line, resulting in a producer of native human monoclonal antibodies (huMAbs). The 3 antibodies obtained were then purified by affinity chromatography, analyzed for binding by Western blot assay and neutralization by FRET assay.

Results: We have succeeded in creating 3 hybridomas that secrete huMAbs specific to native BoNT/A and the proteolytic domain (LC) of BoNT/A. The 1B9 antibody also directly inhibited BoNT/A catalytic activity .

Conclusion: The use activated plasmablasts and memory B-cells isolated at the peak of the immune response (at day 7 of immunogenesis) that have not yet completed the terminal stage of differentiation but have undergone somatic hypermutation for hybridization allows us to obtain specific huMAbs even when the immune response of the donor is weak (with low levels of specific antibodies and specific B-cells in blood). A BoNT/A LC-specific antibody is capable of effectively inhibiting BoNT/A by mechanisms not previously associated with antibodies that neutralize BoNT. Antibodies specific to BoNT LC can be valuable components of a mixture of antibodies against BoNT exposure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11298023PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.34172/bi.2023.27680DOI Listing

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