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Showing 1–18 of 18 results
  • A yeast cell culture approach mimics the benefits of somatic hypermutation to accelerate the discovery of desirable antibodies.

    • Katarzyna Marcinkiewicz
    Research Highlights
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 18, P: 860
  • A novel bright near-infrared fluorescent protein inserted into a nanobody enables visualization of native proteins inside living cells and specific manipulation of cell function, including Boolean protein-based operators.

    • Theodorus W. J. Gadella
    News & Views
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 19, P: 654-655
  • A European guideline on biosimilar monoclonal antibodies suggests smaller trials with homogeneous, younger patient groups may suffice for marketing authorization.

    Editorial
    Nature Biotechnology
    Volume: 29, P: 1
  • The design of vaccines that induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to HIV is extremely challenging. Two reports now demonstrate strategies for the design of immunogens that can induce the production of bnAb precursors and guide these towards the acquisition of improbable mutations.

    • Alexandra Flemming
    Research Highlights
    Nature Reviews Immunology
    Volume: 20, P: 71
  • Proteomics analysis of polyclonal antibodies guides monoclonal production.

    • Monya Baker
    Research Highlights
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 9, P: 440
  • Informed by existing molecular recognition motifs, researchers design effective scaffolds for directed evolution of post-translational modification–specific antibodies.

    • Michael Eisenstein
    Research Highlights
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 10, P: 930-931
  • We convened an ad hoc International Working Group for Antibody Validation in order to formulate the best approaches for validating antibodies used in common research applications and to provide guidelines that ensure antibody reproducibility. We recommend five conceptual 'pillars' for antibody validation to be used in an application-specific manner.

    • Mathias Uhlen
    • Anita Bandrowski
    • Tadashi Yamamoto
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 13, P: 823-827
  • The challenges posed by the biology of the virus remain a barrier to obtaining a complete cure using current antivirals and to developing a working vaccine that will protect from infection and clear disease. Researchers are keenly working to uncover how to elicit long-term broadly neutralizing antibody responses in humans that will protect against infection from all HIV clades and to ensure that people already infected will also have a chance at clearing the virus and being cured. In “Bedside to Bench,” Florian Klein and Henning Gruell discuss a recent study that tracked how broadly neutralizing antibodies developed in an HIV-infected individual during the natural course of the disease. The findings will help create a roadmap to identify the necessary steps to induce antibody maturation for achieving a broad and potent protective humoral response. Another important aspect that defies HIV eradication in infected individuals is the existence of viral reservoirs that allow the virus to hide from antiviral killing. In “Bench to Bedside,” Robert Siliciano peruses recent advances in animal models providing evidence that eliciting effector memory cellular responses to HIV may help eradicate—or prevent the establishment of—latent reservoirs. This strategy could contribute to clearing HIV in treated infected individuals and add to the protection of a humoral vaccine response.

    • Henning Gruell
    • Florian Klein
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 20, P: 478-479