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      A fully synthetic human Fab antibody library based on fixed VH/VL framework pairings with favorable biophysical properties.

      mAbs
      Antibodies, Monoclonal, genetics, therapeutic use, Antibody Affinity, Cells, Cultured, Complementarity Determining Regions, Dimerization, Drug Design, Gene Expression, Gene Library, Humans, Immunoglobulin G, metabolism, Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains, Immunoglobulin Light Chains, Immunotherapy, Protein Engineering, Protein Stability

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          Abstract

          This report describes the design, generation and testing of Ylanthia, a fully synthetic human Fab antibody library with 1.3E+11 clones. Ylanthia comprises 36 fixed immunoglobulin (Ig) variable heavy (VH)/variable light (VL) chain pairs, which cover a broad range of canonical complementarity-determining region (CDR) structures. The variable Ig heavy and Ig light (VH/VL) chain pairs were selected for biophysical characteristics favorable to manufacturing and development. The selection process included multiple parameters, e.g., assessment of protein expression yield, thermal stability and aggregation propensity in fragment antigen binding (Fab) and IgG1 formats, and relative Fab display rate on phage. The framework regions are fixed and the diversified CDRs were designed based on a systematic analysis of a large set of rearranged human antibody sequences. Care was taken to minimize the occurrence of potential posttranslational modification sites within the CDRs. Phage selection was performed against various antigens and unique antibodies with excellent biophysical properties were isolated. Our results confirm that quality can be built into an antibody library by prudent selection of unmodified, fully human VH/VL pairs as scaffolds.

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