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Publication : Antigen-specific human antibodies from mice comprising four distinct genetic modifications.

First Author  Lonberg N Year  1994
Journal  Nature Volume  368
Issue  6474 Pages  856-9
PubMed ID  8159246 Mgi Jnum  J:23835
Mgi Id  MGI:71706 Doi  10.1038/368856a0
Citation  Lonberg N, et al. (1994) Antigen-specific human antibodies from mice comprising four distinct genetic modifications [see comments]. Nature 368(6474):856-9
abstractText  Human sequence monoclonal antibodies, which in theory combine high specificity with low immunogenicity, represent a class of potential therapeutic agents. But nearly 20 years after Kohler and Milstein first developed methods for obtaining mouse antibodies, no comparable technology exists for reliably obtaining high-affinity human antibodies directed against selected targets. Thus, rodent antibodies, and in vitro modified derivatives of rodent antibodies, are still being used and tested in the clinic. The rodent system has certain clear advantages; mice are easy to immunize, are not tolerant to most human antigens, and their B cells form stable hybridoma cell lines. To exploit these advantages, we have developed transgenic mice that express human IgM, IgG and Ig kappa in the absence of mouse IgM or Ig kappa. We report here that these mice contain human sequence transgenes that undergo V(D)J joining, heavy-chain class switching, and somatic mutation to generate a repertoire of human sequence immunoglobulins. They are also homozygous for targeted mutations that disrupt V(D)J rearrangement at the endogenous heavy- and kappa light-chain loci. We have immunized the mice with human proteins and isolated hybridomas secreting human IgG kappa antigen-specific antibodies.
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