Scientists
around the world have been refining a variety of monoclonal antibodies
-- proteins similar to those that occur naturally in the immune
system that search for and bind to specific antigens -- since
the 1970s. However, similar refinements to T-cell receptors have
not been possible for reasons that were unclear.
The
structure of antibodies and T-cell receptors are remarkably similar,
the researchers said, but the responses of each are carried out
very differently.
"The
immune system looks around for things that don't belong,"
said K. Dane Wittrup, the James W. Westwater professor of chemical
engineering at the U. of I. "The two major classes of molecules
that accomplish this are the recognition proteins -- antibodies
and T-cell receptors. We are working at the contact point of where
the immune system decides something does or doesn't belong."
Their
findings offer the hope of doing genetic engineering directly
on recognition molecules from the T-cell system, a therapeutic
approach that has never been done. "In addition, this strategy
for T-cell receptors may be of general use in the study and directed
evolution of other proteins that to date have been impossible
to improve," Kranz said.
The
yeast-display system used in the experiments was created in Wittrup's
lab and published in 1997. The system allows for a library of
mutant proteins to be screened for proteins with improved binding
properties or other features. These improvements can have considerable
practical uses in medicine, agriculture or other industries.
The
National Institutes of Health and the Whitaker Biomedical Engineering
Foundation provided funding for the research. In addition to Kranz
and Wittrup, authors of the PNAS paper were U. of I. graduate
students Michele C. Kieke, Eric V. Shusta and Eric Boder, and
Luc Teyton of the Scripps Research Institute.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by University
Of Illinois At Urbana-Champaign, www.uiuc.edu.
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