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Biotech Exam 2
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37
Anthropology
4th Grade
02/13/2011

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Term

What is a protein domain? What is an immunoglobulin domain?

Definition

Amino acid sequence in a peptide that defines a region that regularly folds the same way and performs a predictable function, such as the catalytic site of an enzyme


            Amino acid sequence in an antibody peptide that always folds into the same functional structure

Term

What is a cytokine?

Definition

A protein that is made by cells of the immune system. Some cytokines can boost the immune response and others can suppress it.

Term
In Figure 1, what are the immunoglobulin domains? What is the difference between the variable domains and the constant domains? Which domains bind to antigen and why? What does the structure of the constant domains tell you?
Definition

Heavy chain & light chain variable & constant

Constant domains are coded by the inherited genome, variable domains coded by recombined DNA

The heavy and light chain variable domains bind antigen because their sequence was selected out the B-cell repertoire

Term
What function does the Fc region of an antibody have? What is an effector  molecule of the immune system?
Definition

Fc  fragment mediates effector activity

Effector molecules bind to Fc and cause some effector process to happen, such as complement-mediated lysis, phagocytosis and cell-mediated cytotoxicity

 

Term
What are the 3 principal modes of action of therapeutic antibodies? What  are the two ways that blocking antibodies can interrupt cytokine signaling?
Definition

Blocking ligand receptor interactions, targeting cells for destruction or something else, acting as signaling agonists

 

Block by binding ligand or block by binding receptor

 

Term

What sorts of signaling effects can antibodies have?

Definition

Crosslinking receptors to activate cell division or other responses, including apoptosis

Term
What is complement-dependent cytotoxicity?  Which antibody classes are involved in CDC? What effector molecules are involved in CDC?
Definition

  • After antibody binding via Fab sites, complement factors attach to Fc and form the membrane attack complex to form a hole in the target cell.
  • IgG and IgM.
  • Complement factors.
Term

What 3 problems are seen when mouse monoclonal antibodies are used as therapeutic or diagnostic agents in humans? What approach was taken to fix these problems?

Definition

  • Short half-life, failure to trigger effector function, human anti-mouse antibodies.
  • Genetic engineering approach to make chimeric antibodies that are partially human sequence and less immunogenic.
Term

What is a chimeric antibody? What advantages do chimeric antibodies have?

Definition

  • A genetically engineered antibody with human constant domains and mouse variable domains.
  • Less immunogenic.
Term
What is CDR grafting? 
Definition

An attempt to minimize the mouse sequence by only cloning the mouse CDR sequence into a human variable domain.

Term

What 3 developments have led to the possibility  of making fully human antibodies by genetic engineering?

Definition

  1. Discovery of human variable region genes
  2. successful expression of them in E. coli
  3. invention of phage display method
Term

If you were  determined to use mice to make  fully human monoclonal antibodies, what would you have to do to the mice?

Definition

Exchange natural mouse immunoglobulin genes for the human genes

Term

What is serum therapy and when was it used? Is it still used, and if so, for what purpose? What is post-exposure prophylaxis?

Definition

  • The intravenous use of serum from a patient who is assumed to have immunity to the infectious disease of the patient. Primarily before the era of antibiotics.
  • Today only for emergencies such as acute lethal toxin or virus exposure such as rabies, botulism.
  • Prevention of infection after known exposure to the agent.
Term

What are the 5 immunoglobulin classes? Which class is the first produced in a primary immune response? Which class is involved in histamine release? Which class is most abundant in serum?  Which class protects the fetus?

 

Definition

  • IgA, IgD, IgE, IgG, IgM.
  • IgM
  • IgE
  • IgG
  • IgG
Term
What are the two  main techniques used to make fully human, monoclonal antibodies today?
Definition

Transgenic mice & phage display

Term

What is the most effective way of making a drug using monoclonal antibodies to treat viral infections?

Definition

Making an artificial polyclonal mixture of monoclonal antibodies

Term

Which cytokine is associated with rheumatoid arthritis and how?

Definition

TNF-alpha accumulates in joints where it causes inflammation

Term

In Table 1, what are the two most frequent general disease indications for approved monoclonal antibodies?

Definition

Cancer -6, immune-4, CV -2, infectious disease-1

Term
What is the general purpose of using therapeutic antibodies to treat cancer? What are the two main targets of these antibodies?
Definition

Cause direct or indirect destruction of cancer cell, by targeting the cell of its blood supply

Term

How can you use radioactive elements and antibodies together to kill cancer cells? How can you use toxins and antibodies together to kill cancer cells?

Definition

Tightly bind a radionuclide or toxin to the antibody without blocking the Fab binding site

Term
What do you need in an antibody in order to kill tumor cells by natural immunoglobulin effector functions?
Definition

functional Fc region

Term
Why do antibodies that block VEGF signaling inhibit tumor growth?  Are there any approved antibodies that work by this mechanism?
Definition

  • VEGF causes a blood supply to form that nourishes the tumor
  • Avastin
Term
What is a naked antibody, and how does it differ from other types of therapeutic antibodies?
Definition

A plain antibody molecule with nothing attached to it and requires natural Fc-mediated effector function to have a therapeutic effect

Term

When naked antibodies kill cancer cells via effector cell cytotoxicity, how does the killing actually happen?

Definition

Cytoxic and phagocytic cells bind the Fc region and kill or engulf the cancer cell

Term

What are bispecific antibodies and how could they be used? What  effector cell population  would be the best target for bispecific antibodies?

Definition

  • Bispecific antibodies have 2 different antigen specificities
  • A cytotoxic effector cell.
Term
What adverse side effect of naked antibody therapy is possible  and what approach is taken to avoid it?
Definition

  • Cytokine storm (cytokine release syndrome)
  • Fc receptor can be mutated to prevent activation of immune effector cells and cytokine secretion
Term
How can small antibodies lacking the Fc region be used in therapy?
Definition

Neutralizing toxins and blocking ligand receptor interactions

Term
Which antibody fragments can be used as blocking agents?
Definition

Fv (engineered), Fab (natural or engineered), Fab2 (natural or engineered)

Term
What two major advantages does the phage library approach have over the traditional monoclonal antibody approach (injecting mice and making hybridomas)?
Definition

More screening capacity can give better specificity and affinity; haptens, toxic drugs and other toxic substance can be used as antigens

Term
What approach in engineering antibodies is taken to increase avidity? What effect on crosslinking ability does an increase in avidity have?
Definition

  • Producing single chain Fv molecules and then grouping them into dimers and trimers
  • increasing avidity increases crosslinking activity
Term
Are complete antibody molecules able to penetrate tissues easily?
Definition
No
Term
What 2 key factors affect the therapeutic efficacy of antibodies?
Definition

Stability (half-life) & immunogenicity

Term
What is pharmacokinetic problem posed by small antibody fragments?
Definition

Rapid clearance from the circulation

Term
Why do complete antibodies tend to have a long serum half-life?
Definition

Presence of the Fc region allows binding of neonatal Fc receptor that prevents destruction of antibody

Term

What modification can be made to increase the serum half-life of antibodies and their fragments? How does it work?

Definition

  • Addition of polyethylene glycol polymers
  • raises size above kidney filtration threshold and lowers immungenicity
Term
What 2 immune potentiation properties will the best vaccines for infectious disease have?
Definition

Stimulation of both antibody and T-cell

Term
What does a “troybody” do and how does it work? What other way could you deliver antigen to immune effector cells?
Definition

  • Antigenic protein is bound to Fc while Fab targets specific T cells
  • attach antigen to another part of the antibody molecule to allow Fc-mediated uptake
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