Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1393657 Chemistry & Biology 2014 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Prevention of cell death is of high interest to biologists and physicians•We present a method to select antibodies that prevent cell death•The method should be general and applicable to cell death of any cause

SummaryOne of the most important phenotypes in biology is cell death. One way to probe the mechanism(s) of cell death is to select molecules that prevent it and learn how this was accomplished. Here, intracellular combinatorial antibody libraries were used to select antibodies that protected cells from killing by rhinovirus infection. These rare antibodies functioned by inhibiting the virus-encoded protease that is necessary for viral maturation. Snapshots of the selection process after each round could be obtained by deep sequencing the ever-enriching populations. This detailed analysis of the enrichment process allowed an interesting look at a “test tube” selection process that pitted two replicating systems against each other. Thus, initially a minority of cells containing protective antibodies must compete against a majority of unprotected cells that continue to produce large amounts of virus.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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