US20110314563A1 - Antibody production - Google Patents

Antibody production Download PDF

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US20110314563A1
US20110314563A1 US13/140,529 US200913140529A US2011314563A1 US 20110314563 A1 US20110314563 A1 US 20110314563A1 US 200913140529 A US200913140529 A US 200913140529A US 2011314563 A1 US2011314563 A1 US 2011314563A1
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light chain
locus
chain gene
endogenous
human
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Roger Kingdon Craig
Franklin Gerardus Grosveld
Richard Wilhelm Janssens
Mariuns Johannes Van Haperen
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KINGDON CRAIG R
Erasmus University Medical Center
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Erasmus University Medical Center
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Priority claimed from GB0906673A external-priority patent/GB0906673D0/en
Priority claimed from GB0909208A external-priority patent/GB0909208D0/en
Priority claimed from GB0909207A external-priority patent/GB0909207D0/en
Application filed by Erasmus University Medical Center filed Critical Erasmus University Medical Center
Assigned to ERASMUS UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER reassignment ERASMUS UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: VAN HAPEREN, MARINUS JOHANNES, GROSVELD, FRANKLIN GERARDUS, JANSSENS, RICHARD WILHELM
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K67/00Rearing or breeding animals, not otherwise provided for; New or modified breeds of animals
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; AVICULTURE; APICULTURE; PISCICULTURE; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
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    • A01K67/027New or modified breeds of vertebrates
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    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K67/027New or modified breeds of vertebrates
    • A01K67/0275Genetically modified vertebrates, e.g. transgenic
    • A01K67/0276Knock-out vertebrates
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P37/00Drugs for immunological or allergic disorders
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K16/00Immunoglobulins [IGs], e.g. monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies
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    • C12BIOCHEMISTRY; BEER; SPIRITS; WINE; VINEGAR; MICROBIOLOGY; ENZYMOLOGY; MUTATION OR GENETIC ENGINEERING
    • C12PFERMENTATION OR ENZYME-USING PROCESSES TO SYNTHESISE A DESIRED CHEMICAL COMPOUND OR COMPOSITION OR TO SEPARATE OPTICAL ISOMERS FROM A RACEMIC MIXTURE
    • C12P21/00Preparation of peptides or proteins
    • C12P21/005Glycopeptides, glycoproteins
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K2207/15Humanized animals
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K2217/00Genetically modified animals
    • A01K2217/07Animals genetically altered by homologous recombination
    • A01K2217/072Animals genetically altered by homologous recombination maintaining or altering function, i.e. knock in
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K2217/00Genetically modified animals
    • A01K2217/15Animals comprising multiple alterations of the genome, by transgenesis or homologous recombination, e.g. obtained by cross-breeding
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K2217/00Genetically modified animals
    • A01K2217/20Animal model comprising regulated expression system
    • A01K2217/206Animal model comprising tissue-specific expression system, e.g. tissue specific expression of transgene, of Cre recombinase
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
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    • A01K2227/00Animals characterised by species
    • A01K2227/10Mammal
    • A01K2227/105Murine
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    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01KANIMAL HUSBANDRY; AVICULTURE; APICULTURE; PISCICULTURE; FISHING; REARING OR BREEDING ANIMALS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; NEW BREEDS OF ANIMALS
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    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K2317/00Immunoglobulins specific features
    • C07K2317/20Immunoglobulins specific features characterized by taxonomic origin
    • C07K2317/24Immunoglobulins specific features characterized by taxonomic origin containing regions, domains or residues from different species, e.g. chimeric, humanized or veneered
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    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07KPEPTIDES
    • C07K2317/00Immunoglobulins specific features
    • C07K2317/50Immunoglobulins specific features characterized by immunoglobulin fragments
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    • C07K2317/56Immunoglobulins specific features characterized by immunoglobulin fragments variable (Fv) region, i.e. VH and/or VL
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    • C12N15/00Mutation or genetic engineering; DNA or RNA concerning genetic engineering, vectors, e.g. plasmids, or their isolation, preparation or purification; Use of hosts therefor
    • C12N15/09Recombinant DNA-technology
    • C12N15/63Introduction of foreign genetic material using vectors; Vectors; Use of hosts therefor; Regulation of expression
    • C12N15/79Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts
    • C12N15/85Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for animal cells
    • C12N15/8509Vectors or expression systems specially adapted for eukaryotic hosts for animal cells for producing genetically modified animals, e.g. transgenic

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to improved methods for the derivation and selection using transgenic non-human mammals of a diverse repertoire of functional, affinity-matured tetrameric immunoglobulins comprising heavy and light chains in response to antigen challenge and uses thereof.
  • the present invention relates to a non-human mammal, preferably a mouse, engineered such that either its ability to generate endogenous mouse kappa and/or lambda light chain immunoglobulins is substantially reduced, or the ability of light chains to complex with heavy chain is reduced, eliminated or blocked.
  • the non-human mammals of the invention also have a reduced ability to generate functional endogenous mouse heavy chains.
  • their ability to form functional immunoglobulin tetramers comprising re-arranged heavy and light chains produced from said mutated loci has been substantially reduced or eliminated.
  • antibodies The structure of antibodies is well known in the art. Most natural antibodies are tetrameric, comprising two heavy chains and two light chains. The heavy chains are joined to each other via disulphide bonds between hinge domains located approximately half way along each heavy chain. A light chain is associated with each heavy chain on the N-terminal side of the hinge domain. Each light chain is normally bound to its respective heavy chain by a disulphide bond close to the hinge domain.
  • each chain folds into a number of distinct globular domains joined by more linear polypeptide sequences.
  • the light chain folds into a variable (V L ) and a constant (C ⁇ or C ⁇ ) domain.
  • Heavy chains have a single variable domain V H , a first constant domain (C H 1), a hinge domain and two or three further constant domains.
  • the heavy chain constant domains and the hinge domain together form what is generally known as the constant region of an antibody heavy chain.
  • Interaction of the heavy (V H ) and light (V L ) chain variable domains results in the formation of an antigen binding region (Fv).
  • Interaction of the heavy and light chains is facilitated by the C H 1 domain of the heavy chain and the C ⁇ or C ⁇ domain of the light chain.
  • V H and V L are required for antigen binding, although heavy chain dimers and amino-terminal fragments have been shown to retain activity in the absence of light chain (Jaton et al. (1968) Biochemistry, 7, 4185-4195).
  • proportion of circulating ⁇ light chain is low, representing perhaps 2-5% of the total light chain complexed as a tetrameric immunoglobulin in plasma (Goldsby et al. (2003) Immunology, 5th edition, W.H. Freeman & Co NY).
  • the resulting hybrid IgE retained antigen specificity and showed effector activity expected of an IgE (Neuberger et al. (1985) Nature, 314, 268-270).
  • Other literature examples of heavy chain engineering include: hybrid mouse-human antibody genes encoding mouse V H human/IgA or IgG antibody fusions which retain anti-phosphocholine activity (Morrison et al. (1984) PNAS, 81, 6851-6855); an anti-carcinoma-associated antigen 17-1A antibody comprising mouse V H and human IgG ( ⁇ 3) constant region (Sun et al.
  • anti-human T-cell antibody comprising human IgG ( ⁇ 1) constant region and mouse V H domains (see Heinrich et al. (1989) J. Immunol., 143, 3589-97).
  • Normal human B cells contain a single immunoglobulin heavy chain locus on chromosome 14 from which the gene encoding a heavy chain is produced by rearrangement. In the mouse, the heavy chain locus is located on chromosome 12.
  • a normal heavy chain locus comprises a plurality of V gene segments, a number of D gene segments and a number of J gene segments. Most of a V H domain is encoded by a V gene segment, but the C terminal end of each V H domain is encoded by a D gene segment and a J gene segment.
  • VDJ rearrangement in B-cells, followed by affinity maturation, provides each V H domain with its antigen-binding specificity.
  • Fully human antibodies can now be derived from transgenic mice in response to antigen challenge.
  • Such transgenic mice generally comprise a single human heavy chain immunoglobulin locus and a separate human light chain immunoglobulin locus.
  • the corresponding endogenous mouse heavy chain, kappa light chain and, optionally, lambda light chain loci coding sequences are deleted or partially deleted.
  • human antibodies comprising a kappa light chain are produced in a low background of mouse/human antibodies comprising a human heavy chain and a mouse lambda light chain (WO90/04036; WO93/12227; WO98/24893; U.S. Pat. No. 5,877,397, U.S. Pat. No. 5,814,318 and U.S.
  • any additional introduced immunoglobulin heavy chain transgene is also regulated by allelic exclusion, so that some B-cells functionally express mouse heavy and light chain loci only and others human heavy chain loci only and mouse light chain loci (Nussenzweig et al. (1987) Science, 236, 816-819).
  • allelic exclusion so that some B-cells functionally express mouse heavy and light chain loci only and others human heavy chain loci only and mouse light chain loci.
  • immunoglobulin heavy chain transgenes comprise essential tissue-specific enhancer elements to ensure B-cell specific expression in a copy number dependent manner.
  • the presence of a 5′ intronic enhancer and the 3′ LCR ensures that transgenes are active at all stages of B-cell maturation (Guglielmi et al. (2003) Biochim Biophys. Acta, 1642, 181-190).
  • the inclusion of heavy and light chain specific LCRs in the transgene loci ensures not only that expression is B-cell specific, but that expression occurs irrespective of the site of integration into the genome (WO90/10077, Mills et al. (1997) J. Exp. Med., 186, 845-858 and Pettersson et al.
  • every transgene is functional irrespective of its position in the genome.
  • the chromatin surrounding the transgene is only partially open to transcription at any point in time, leading to positional effect mosaic expression, and so limited levels of expression of the transgene across the target tissue (Festenstein et al. (1996) Science, 23, 271 (5252):1123-5; Milot et al. (1996) Cell, 87(1), 105-14)
  • a non-human mammal containing an endogenous lambda light chain gene locus, an endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and an endogenous heavy chain gene locus, each of which can re-arrange so that immunoglobulin heavy and light chain genes are formed and expressed in B-cells following antigen challenge but said loci have been mutated so that the ability to form functional immunoglobulin tetramers comprising re-arranged heavy and light chains produced from said mutated loci has been substantially reduced or eliminated.
  • At least one of the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus, the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and the endogenous heavy chain gene locus may have been mutated by the introduction of a frame shift mutation, a polypeptide-encoding sequence and/or one or more stop codons into the or each endogenous locus.
  • the mutation is preferably an insertion of less than 50 nucleotides.
  • the expression of at least one of the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus, the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and the endogenous heavy chain gene locus may have been substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the LCR in the or each locus.
  • the introduction is in the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus.
  • the introduction is in the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus.
  • the introduction is in the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus.
  • the introduction may also be in the endogenous heavy chain gene locus.
  • the introduction may in a further alternative be in the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and in the endogenous heavy chain gene locus.
  • the introduction may in a yet further alternative be in the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus and in the endogenous heavy chain gene locus.
  • the introduction may in an even further alternative be in the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus, in the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and in the endogenous heavy chain gene locus.
  • the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus there is an introduction, as defined in above, in the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus and there is a partial or complete LCR deletion, as defined above, in the endogenous lambda gene locus.
  • the endogenous heavy chain gene locus may be mutated such that heavy chain gene rearrangement, mRNA transcription and protein synthesis occurs but that B-cell activation is blocked.
  • the non-human mammal as defined above comprises a transgene comprising one or more heterologous kappa light chain gene loci and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements.
  • the non-human mammal may further comprises a transgene comprising one or more heterologous lambda light chain gene loci and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements.
  • the transgene may comprise a heterologous light chain gene locus comprises a dominant selective marker gene.
  • the non-human mammal as defined above may also comprise a transgene comprising one or more one or more heterologous heavy chain gene loci and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements.
  • the non-human mammal may comprise two or more transgenes comprising two or more different heterologous heavy chain gene loci and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements.
  • each transgene may comprise a heterologous heavy chain gene locus comprises a dominant selective marker gene.
  • each heterologous heavy chain gene locus may comprise a CTCF binding sites.
  • the non-human mammal comprises a transgene comprising a heterologous kappa light chain gene locus and a transgene comprising one or more heterologous heavy chain loci.
  • the non-human mammal may comprise a transgene comprising a heterologous lambda light chain gene locus and a transgene comprising one or more heterologous heavy chain loci.
  • the non-human mammal may comprises a transgene comprising a heterologous kappa light chain gene locus, a transgene comprising a lambda light chain gene locus and a transgene comprising one or more heterologous heavy chain gene loci.
  • each heterologous locus incorporates a cognate LCR.
  • Each heterologous locus is preferably a human locus.
  • each heterologous locus may be a hybrid locus comprising variable regions and constant regions derived from more than one species, such as a hybrid locus comprising human variable regions and rat or murine constant regions.
  • the non-human mammal may comprise groups of transgenes comprising different groups of different heterologous heavy chain gene loci, wherein each group of transgenes comprises a different dominant selective marker gene.
  • the non-human mammal may comprise transgenes comprising heterologous light chain loci and transgenes comprising heterologous heavy chain loci, wherein transgenes comprising heterologous light chain loci and transgenes comprising heterologous heavy chain loci each comprise a different dominant selective marker gene.
  • the non-human mammal is preferably a rodent, such as a mouse.
  • the present invention provides a method of producing an antigen-specific heterologous monoclonal antibody comprising:
  • a mammalian, preferably human, antibody from a hybrid antibody comprising:
  • a method for the production of the non-human mammal as defined above comprising mutating the endogenous heavy chain gene locus, the endogenous kappa light chain gene locus, and optionally the endogenous lambda light chain gene locus in a mammalian progenitor cell and producing a mammal from said progenitor cell, wherein the mutation is such that, in the mammal, each locus can re-arrange so that immunoglobulin heavy and light chain genes are formed and expressed in B-cells following antigen challenge but the ability to form functional immunoglobulin tetramers comprising re-arranged heavy and light chains produced from said mutated loci has been substantially reduced or eliminated.
  • the progenitor cell is a non-human embryonic stem cell.
  • the non-human mammal is preferably a rodent, such as a mouse.
  • the present invention also provides use of antigen-specific, heterologous, functional immunoglobulin tetramers, preferably human, derived using a non-human mammal or the method as defined above as medicaments, diagnostics or reagents.
  • the present inventors have surprisingly overcome the limitations of the prior art, through the development of simplified methods for the production of non-human mammals, particularly mice, wherein the functional expression of endogenous kappa and/or lambda light chain genes has been substantially reduced through either the constant regions being rendered non-functional as a result of a small insertional event preferably in the kappa constant region and/or lambda constant region, leading to a frame-shift or premature termination of mRNA translation, or elimination of part or all of the cognate endogenous LCR
  • the ability of the endogenous light chain loci and/or heavy chain loci to produce heavy and light chains that interact and form functional immunoglobulin tetramers can be eliminated or substantially reduced following the introduction of a frame shift mutation, leading to the synthesis of irrelevent protein sequence, generally accompanied by premature termination of protein synthesis due to the presence of out-of-frame stop codons.
  • the preferred approach is to insert new sequence. Effective insertional events designed either to cause a frame shift in the amino acid coding sequence, resulting in the premature termination of translation of the encoded mRNA, can be limited to the introduction of a single nucleotide. Thus, the insertion of one or more nucleocleotides within the coding region may lead to a frameshift. Alternatively the insertion of in-frame sequence encoding additional peptide sequences comprising a stop codon will also result in the synthesis of a truncated protein (U.S. Pat. No.
  • Targeted insertional events may also include the introduction of selective marker genes and other functionalities, provided that all the endogenous sequence is retained and the resulting fusion protein disrupts the formation of immunoglobulin tetramers, or the presence of one or more in-frame stop codon(s) leads to premature termination of mRNA translation, resulting in the synthesis of a truncated protein unable to form functional immunoglobulin tetramers.
  • insertional events are in immunoglobulin ⁇ light chain constant regions.
  • insertional events are in immunoglobulin ⁇ and/or ⁇ light chain constant regions.
  • insertions may comprise any recombinase recognition site(s) such as a lox site. This alone may lead to a frame shift.
  • additional nucleotides to ensure a frameshift, or codons for one or more stop codons may also add to the effectiveness of the inserted sequence in the disruption of heavy and light chain dimerisation through the interaction of the heavy chain C H 1 domains and the light chain ⁇ and/or ⁇ constant regions.
  • An insertion can comprise a single nucleotide, and is preferably less than 50 nucleotides.
  • the insertion may result in only a frameshift, but preferably is designed such that one or more stop codons results in premature termination of mRNA translation.
  • the insertion is performed using homologous recombination using arms which flank the site of insertion.
  • a selective marker is included during the manipulation process and then subsequently excised, leaving the recognition sites alone plus any additional inserted sequence in situ in the genome, e.g. lox sites.
  • frame shifts and the synthesis of truncated proteins can also be achieved by the deletion of one or more nucleotides in the coding sequence and the inclusion of minimal additional sequence comprising stop codons.
  • the insertion or deletion event occurs in the constant regions of the heavy and light chain genes and not in the multiple V, D and J regions of the endogenous loci.
  • the preferred choice is the kappa light chain constant region.
  • endogenous immunoglobulin gene rearrangement or mRNA transcription there is no dependency on large scale gene deletion strategies for the elimination of endogenous immunoglobulin gene rearrangement or mRNA transcription.
  • Identical insertional strategies can be used to inhibit the ability of endogenous heavy chain immunoglobulin to form functional tetrameric complexes with light chain through targeted insertional events within the C H 1 regions of heavy chain isotypes.
  • the expression of endogenous immunoglobulin heavy chain genes is blocked at the pre-B-cell stage such that the endogenous heavy chains are not expressed on the surface of B cells and productive expression resulting from B-cell expansion is blocked, using strategies similar to those described by Kitamura et al.
  • immunoglobulin transgenes will participate in the allelic exclusion process of the chosen non-human mammalian host in a B-cell specific manner, resulting in a productive response to antigen challenge, B-cell expansion and circulating, transgene-encoded antigen-specific immunoglobulin tetramers.
  • endogenous lambda light chain gene expression is substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the lambda light chain LCR and endogenous kappa light chain gene expression is substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the kappa light chain LCR.
  • only endogenous kappa light chain expression, or only lambda light chain expression is substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the relevant LCR.
  • the endogenous light chain loci may retain functionality in that they can rearrange and be transcribed into functional mRNA, but that the levels of transcription are substantially reduced through the elimination of some or all of the endogenous LCR functionality (WO90/10077).
  • LCR functionality is removed by gene targeting nuclease hypersensitive sites in mouse ES cells or, in the absence of ES cells, by cloning using either nuclear transfer (Soulter (1998) Nature, 394, 315-316) or iPS cells (see Gottweiss. and Minger (2008) Nature Biotechnology, 26, 271-272) derived from other mammalian species.
  • disruption of the heavy or light chains could be achieved through targeted mutagenesis, such as zinc finger nuclease technology and DNA repair (e.g http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/life-science/functional-genoinics-and-rnai/zinc-finger-nuclease-technology).
  • Endogenous kappa light chain gene expression may be substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the kappa light chain LCR, and the lambda light chain gene may be functionally silenced following deletion or insertional events.
  • Endogenous lambda light chain gene expression may be substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the lambda light chain LCR, and the kappa light chain gene may be functionally silenced following deletion or insertional events.
  • Endogenous kappa light chain gene may be functionally silenced following LCR elimination or insertional events.
  • the invention also provides non-human mammals in which either or both endogenous kappa light chain gene expression and endogenous lambda light chain gene expression are substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the kappa light chain LCR and/or elimination of part or all of the lambda light chain LCR.
  • the endogenous kappa gene may be functionally silenced and endogenous lambda gene activity substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the lambda light chain LCR.
  • Kappa light chain gene expression may be substantially reduced by elimination of part or all of the kappa light chain LCR reduced and lambda gene expression functionally silenced.
  • Only endogenous kappa light chain gene expression may be substantially reduced by elimination of the kappa chain LCR or functionally silenced by deletion or insertional events.
  • the non-human mammals having functionally silenced endogenous kappa and/or lambda light chain gene expression or substantially reduced endogenous kappa and/or lambda light chain gene expression as described above may also have reduced or functionally silenced endogenous heavy chain gene expression.
  • endogenous heavy chain gene expression is reduced following the deletion of some or all nuclease hypersensitive sites which comprise the LCR or functionally silenced following deletion or insertional events in the non-human mammals of the invention.
  • the expression of endogenous heavy chain genes is blocked at the pre-B-cell stage such that the endogenous heavy chains are not expressed on the surface of B cells and productive expression resulting from B-cell expansion is blocked using strategies similar to those described by Kitamura et al. (1991) Nature, 350, 423-426.
  • the non-human mammals described above may further comprise one or more transgenes comprising heterologous heavy and light chain loci and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements, preferably comprising cognate LCRs.
  • heterologous means a nucleotide sequence or a locus as herein described which is not endogenous to the mammal in which it is located.
  • the non-human mammal may thus comprise a transgene comprising a heterologous kappa light chain locus and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements, preferably comprising an LCR and/or a transgene comprising a heterologous lambda light chain locus and associated B-cell specific regulatory elements, preferably comprising an LCR.
  • LCRs are not essential for B-cell specific expression. Their inclusion within loci ensures that high level transgene expression occurs at every site of integration and is not dependent on random integration events, only some of which fortuitously occur within chromatin regions actively transcribed in B-cells.
  • LCRs are highly reduces the number of transgenic animals required to be screened for antibody expression and allows the insertion of more than one gene locus, with the certainty that all loci inserted will be expressed at essentially normal levels in a B-cell specific manner.
  • allelic exclusion mechanisms will discriminate between endogenous immunoglobulin genes and multiple competing transgenes, opens the way for the assembly of transgenic non-human mammals comprising one or more immunoglobulin heavy or light chain gene loci, each locus being of reduced V gene complexity relative to the endogenous genes and comprising a relatively manageable piece of DNA ( ⁇ 300 Kb) to assemble in vitro relative to the endogenous loci (1-2 Mb).
  • the 39 functional human immunoglobulin heavy chain V gene segments may be cloned into two or more immunoglobulin heavy chain loci.
  • Each will comprise different V gene segments, but have in common D and J gene segments, and constant (effector) regions.
  • the inclusion of the LCR ensures that each is expressed in an identical manner, irrespective of the site of integration within the genome.
  • the inclusion of two or more small loci in this manner provides the same V gene complexity of a single, more complex gene present in a single, large gene fragment which is technically difficult to manipulate.
  • Each heterologous light chain locus may comprise V L gene segments, J gene segments and a light chain constant region segment.
  • V L and J gene segments and light chain constant region segment are derived from the same mammalian source, for example rodent, pig, cow, goat or sheep. Preferably, they are of human origin.
  • the heterologous light chain loci may be hybrid loci comprising variable domains of mammalian origin, preferably of human origin, and constant (effector) regions from a different mammal, such as, but not limited to, mouse, rat, hamster, rabbit, pig, goat and cow.
  • a different mammal such as, but not limited to, mouse, rat, hamster, rabbit, pig, goat and cow.
  • the host mammal is a mouse
  • the constant regions are of rodent origin, more preferably mouse or rat.
  • Such heterologous light chain loci comprise V L and J segments preferably from one species only and a light chain constant region from another species.
  • the V L and J gene segments are preferably from the same species, contributing the heavy chain V, D and J gene segments, and are preferably of human origin.
  • the kappa light chain constant and heavy chain constant regions are also preferably derived from the same species but a species different from that contributing variable domains and are preferably of rodent origin, and preferably derived from rat or mouse.
  • a feature of all light chain transgenes contemplated is that, following antigen challenge, the light chain rearranges in a B-cell specific manner and that, following transcription and translation, the resulting light chain is capable of complexing with transgene-derived heavy chain immunoglobulin produced in the same B-cell.
  • the productive expression of immunoglobulin tetramers gives rise to B-cell expansion and transgene-encoded, antigen-specific tetravalent immunoglobulin complexes accumulate in serum in the absence of significant levels of endogenous immunoglobulin tetramers.
  • a heterologous kappa light chain locus present in a transgene in the non-human mammal of the invention comprises one or more human V L gene segments, all human J L gene segments and a single human kappa light chain constant region.
  • the human kappa light chain constant region may be replaced by an alternate mammalian kappa light chain constant region, preferably of rat or mouse origin.
  • a heterologous lambda light chain locus present in a transgene in the non-human mammal of the invention preferably comprises a murine lambda LCR, and human lambda light chain V1 and V2 gene segments, human lambda J1, J2, J3 and J4 gene segments, and human lambda light chain C1, C2, C3 and C4 constant region segments (WO90/10077 and WO2003/000737).
  • the human lambda light chain C1, C2, C3 and C4 constant region segments may be replaced by alternative lambda light chain constant regions, preferably of rat or mouse origin.
  • a heterologous heavy chain locus present in a transgene in the non-human mammal of the invention preferably comprises a heavy chain immunoglobulin LCR, preferably of murine origin, one or more human V gene segments, one or more J gene segments and one or more D gene segments. Preferably, 10 or more human different V gene segments and all human J and D gene segments are present.
  • the locus also may comprise one or more human constant (effector) regions, preferably the ⁇ and ⁇ constant regions.
  • the human constant effector regions may be replaced by effector regions from other non-human mammals.
  • the non-human mammalian host is a mouse or a rat
  • constant (effector) regions are derived from rat or mouse.
  • the transmembrane domains of the mouse and rat B-cell receptor complex (BCR) are 100% conserved.
  • mice transgenic for antibody loci comprising rat constant (effector) region genes should function as well as those comprising mouse constant (effector) region genes following antigen challenge, and may be superior to those comprising human constant (effector) region genes (De Franco et al.
  • the transgenes may comprise heavy chain, kappa and lambda light chain LCRs, preferably of mouse or human origin. LCRs which function across all mammalian species are known and may be substituted for human or mouse LCRs in the transgenes (Li et al. (1999) Trends Genet., 10, 403-8).
  • cloned human antigen-specific V H and V L binding domains derived from hybrid antibodies expressed by hybridomas can be fused to human constant heavy and light chain constant regions, so deriving fully human tetrameric antibodies of any class.
  • each immunoglobulin kappa and/or lambda light chain locus may also comprise a dominant selective marker gene.
  • the dominant selective marker genes incorporated in the loci may have the same or different mechanisms of action.
  • any dominant selective marker gene can be used, provided that expression of the gene confers a selective benefit to hybridomas or transformed B-cells derived from the non-human transgenic mammal in the presence of a selective or toxic challenge.
  • the dominant selective marker genes will be of prokaryotic origin and will be selected from a group which either confer resistance to toxic drugs, such as puromycin (Vara et al. (1986) NAR, 14, 4617-4624), hygromycin (Santerre et al. (1984) Gene, 30, 147-156) and G418 (Colbere-Garapin et al.
  • the dominant selective marker is incorporated within the immunoglobulin light chain transgenic locus and is co-expressed with the desired immunoglobulin light chain allele, so ensuring B-cell specific expression.
  • the drug resistance gene may be inserted into an endogenous or exogenous (transgenic) immunoglobulin locus using homologous recombination in combination with ES cells or nuclear transfer approaches (te Riele et al. (1992), PNAS, 89, 11, 5128-5132).
  • the non-human mammal may also comprise a transgene or transgenes comprising a heterologous heavy chain locus and associated B-cell specific LCR and regulatory elements. More than one different transgenic heavy chain gene locus may be present, each comprising an LCR and regulatory elements.
  • the heavy chain gene loci each comprising one or more V gene segments, one or more D gene segments, one or more J gene segments, and one or more constant (effector) regions are introduced as transgenes, each locus comprising a cognate LCR.
  • Each locus comprises the 5′ and 3′ regulatory elements necessary to drive B-cell specific expression.
  • Each heavy or light chain locus is expressed in an essentially identical manner to the endogenous loci in response to antigen challenge, leading to the circulation in mouse serum of transgene-encoded, antigen-specific affinity-matured, tetrameric immunoglobulins.
  • each heavy chain gene locus comprises one or multiple V gene segments, e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 45, 50, 60 or more V gene segments, which may be derived from any vertebrate species, preferably a non-human mammal.
  • V gene segments e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 45, 50, 60 or more V gene segments, which may be derived from any vertebrate species, preferably a non-human mammal.
  • V gene segments e.g. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40,
  • each locus may comprise only one V gene segment.
  • a number of V gene segments are present and each V gene segment is different from all other V gene segments.
  • the V gene segments in any one locus may all be derived from an organism of the same species, e.g. all V gene segments may be of human origin.
  • V gene segments in any one locus may be derived from organisms of different species, e.g. some V gene segments from human and others from sheep, cattle, rabbits, camelids or even shark.
  • each V gene segment is identical to all the other V gene segments. Irrespective of the number and nature of the V gene segments present, the remaining D and J gene segments in each locus may be the same as or may be different from those in all the other loci.
  • the non-human mammal may contain multiple copies of a heavy chain gene locus. This has the advantage of optimising the chances that a productive re-arrangement in a B-cell will take place, thus allowing the optimal production of an immunoglobulin heavy chain for antigen recognition.
  • each locus comprises multiple V gene segments.
  • the V gene segments are of human origin.
  • V gene segment encompasses any naturally occurring V gene segment derived from a vertebrate, including, but not limited to, sharks, rodents, camelids and human.
  • the V gene segment must be capable of recombining with a D gene segment, a J gene segment and a gene segment encoding a heavy chain constant (effector) region to generate an immunoglobulin heavy chain antibody capable of complexing with either a kappa or lambda immunoglobulin light chain when the re-arranged nucleic acid is expressed in B-cells.
  • a V gene segment also includes within its scope any gene sequence encoding a natural or engineered homologue, derivative or protein fragment which is capable of recombining with a D gene segment, a J gene segment and a gene segment encoding a heavy chain constant region to generate an immunoglobulin heavy chain antibody capable of complexing with either a kappa or lambda immunoglobulin light chain when the re-arranged nucleic acid is expressed in B-cells.
  • a V gene segment may, for example, be derived from a T-cell receptor locus.
  • the multiple heavy chain loci of the invention comprise any number or combination of the 39 functional human V gene segments and engineered variants thereof. These may be on any number of loci, e.g. four loci comprising eight V gene segments plus one locus comprising seven V gene segments; seven loci comprising four V gene segments plus one locus comprising three V gene segments; or thirty-nine loci comprising one V gene segment each.
  • Human V genes are classified into seven families, V H 1 to V H 7, and the individual genes within each family numbered. The frequency at which each gene is used is dependent on the varying requirements of the particular immune response. For example, the genes of family V H 3 may be preferentially used in comparison to those of family V H 5 when responding to bacterial antigens. Therefore, in a further preferred embodiment of the invention, groups of V gene segments which have been shown to be useful for generating an antibody response against specific antigens are grouped into separate loci, each comprising a different dominant selective marker gene. The V gene segments may be grouped according to family or they may be grouped according to individual function.
  • V genes of family V H 3 are shown to be useful for generating an immune response against bacterial antigens, then these may be used to generate a locus which is particularly useful for generating heavy chain-only antibodies against bacterial antigens.
  • V H 3 and V H 5 are useful for generating an immune response against bacterial antigens, then these may be grouped together and used to generate a locus which is particularly useful for generating antibodies against bacterial antigens.
  • an “immunoglobulin heavy chain locus” in the context of the present invention relates to a minimal micro-locus encoding a V H domain comprising one or more V gene segments, one or more D gene segments and one or more J gene segments, operationally linked to one or more gene segments encoding heavy chain constant (effector) regions.
  • the primary source of antibody repertoire variability is the CDR3 region formed by the selection of V, D and J gene segments and by the V-D and D-J junctions.
  • the advantage of the present invention is that antibody repertoire and diversity obtained in the rearranged V, D and J gene segments can be maximised through the use of multiple immunoglobulin heavy chain gene loci in the same transgenic non-human mammal by exploiting allelic exclusion.
  • allelic exclusion which randomly chooses one of the loci to start recombination, followed by the next locus if the first recombination was non-productive, etc., until a productive recombination has been produced from one of the loci, would ensure that actually all the V gene segments present in the combined loci would be part of the overall recombination process.
  • CTCF sites may be interdispersed between groups of VH gene segments.
  • the immunoglobulin locus in its normal configuration appears to have a three dimensional folded structure based on distance measurements made in B cells and measuring in the direction of and through the VH region (Jhunjhunwala et al. (2008) Cell, 133, 265-279). Such a folded or looped structure explains why different V H region can be used equally efficiently even when they are arranged at very different distances from the D, J and constant region of the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus.
  • CTCF chromatin binding protein
  • Each transgene comprising a heterologous heavy chain locus may further comprise a dominant selective marker.
  • the dominant selective marker is different from the dominant selective marker introduced within the kappa or lambda light chain loci.
  • any dominant selective marker gene can be used, provided that expression of the gene confers a selective benefit to hybridomas or transformed B-cells derived from the non-human transgenic mammal in the presence of a selective or toxic challenge.
  • the dominant selective marker genes will be of prokaryotic origin and will be selected from a group which either confer resistance to toxic drugs, such as puromycin (Vara et al. (1986) NAR, 14, 4617-4624), hygromycin (Santerre et al. (1984) Gene, 30, 147-156) and G418 (Colbere-Garapin et al.
  • the dominant selective marker(s), if used, reside within the immunoglobulin heavy chain transgenic loci, so ensuring B-cell specific co-expression.
  • the drug resistance gene may be inserted into an endogenous or exogenous (transgenic) immunoglobulin locus using homologous recombination in combination with ES cells or nuclear transfer approaches (e.g. to Riele, Robanus Maandag and Berns (1992), PNAS, 89, 11, 5128-5132).
  • the same dominant selective marker gene may be incorporated within all heavy chain loci.
  • different heavy chain loci or groups of heavy chain loci may comprise different dominant selective marker genes.
  • Hybridomas or transformed B-cells preferably transformed long-lived plasma cells (Slifka et al (1998) Immunity, 8, 363-372), derived from transgenic mice of the invention expressing tetrameric antibodies may be selected for, free of cells expressing endogenous immunoglobulin, due to the co-expression of a functional dominant selective marker gene within the transgenic light chain loci.
  • hybridomas or transformed B-cell lines expressing antibodies derived from specific groups of V segments present on transgenic heavy chain loci may also be selected for due to the presence and co-expression of different dominant selective markers within heavy chain loci relative to the dominant selective markers incorporated within the light chain loci.
  • the inclusion of a puromycin resistance gene within the kappa light chain transgenic locus would allow selection of all cells expressing the kappa light chain transgene.
  • the inclusion of the G418 resistance gene within a heavy chain transgenic locus comprising preferred V gene segments would allow the selection of all cells expressing the preferred V gene segments.
  • the invention provides a method of producing an antigen-specific heterologous monoclonal antibody comprising:
  • FIG. 1A The 3′ end of the mouse IgH locus.
  • the map is copied from the IMGT database (http://imgt.cines.f).
  • the scale is in kilobases (kb). Green squares, functional V H segments; red and yellow squares, non-functional V H segments; orange squares, J H segments; blue squares, constant regions.
  • the intronic IgH enhancer and the LCR at the 3′ end of the locus are not indicated.
  • FIG. 1B Strategy to disable IgH
  • the top line shows the C ⁇ region of the mouse with the different exons including the two exons coding for the membrane form of IgM. To the left are the J, D and V H region of the locus, to the right the other constant regions starting with C ⁇ .
  • the bottom lines show part of the amino acid sequence of the normal M1 exon after recombination.
  • the DNA sequence shows the integration sequence. The stop codon is in red, the Spe I site in red and blue.
  • FIG. 1C Recombination in ES cells to disable C ⁇
  • This figure shows two of the recombination positive clones of ES cells by PCR analysis covering the 3′ side of the recombinant insert.
  • the larger fragment corresponds to the insertion of a neo selectable marker into the M1 exon at the position indicated in FIG. 5B .
  • FIG. 1D FACS analysis of the C ⁇ knockout mice
  • the ES cells are introduced into blastocysts to obtain chimeras. These are bred to homozygosity and the blood is analyzed for the presence of B cells.
  • the top two panels show a FACS analysis of a normal wild type mouse and a heterozygous interrupted M1 exon mouse using the B cell markers B220 and CD19.
  • the bottom two panels show two homozygous mice, which show no B220 + , CD19 + cells, i.e. no functional B cells.
  • FIG. 1E Deletion of neo after breeding to recombinant mice
  • mice of FIG. 5D are crossed with recombinase-expressing mice to delete the neo gene.
  • the two lanes on the right show a long range PCR product over the neo gene in the parent animals, the next two lanes to the left two heterozygous mice carrying a deletion of neo and a wt allele.
  • the next four lanes lane to the left are wild type mice, while the lane furthest left show a mouse carrying a homozygous deletion of the neo gene with an inactivated M1 exon.
  • FIG. 2 A map of the mouse Ig ⁇ locus
  • the map is copied from the IMGT database (http://imgt.cines.f).
  • the scale is in kilobases (kb). Green squares, V ⁇ segments; orange squares, J ⁇ segments; blue square, constant region; black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences.
  • FIG. 3 Mouse V ⁇ knockdown.
  • a lox neomycin resistance gene cassette is inserted by homologous recombination in ES cells replacing the 3′ ⁇ -LCR (bottom line). Treatment with cre recombinase (+cre) will remove all sequences between the lox sites, leaving a single lox site in the ⁇ locus (top line).
  • FIG. 4 A mouse C ⁇ insertion to inactivate the ⁇ locus.
  • the locus (top line) is the same as in FIG. 3 .
  • the bottom shows the sequence at the 5′ end of the C ⁇ exon (blue in top line) with the amino acid coding written above the bases.
  • the GG base pair at the start is immediately flanking the splice acceptor site coding for the amino acid R after splicing.
  • the middle line shows the insertion of a 34 basepair lox site insertion (blue and red inverted repeat sequence), which puts the codon usage of the constant region out of frame and creating downstream stop codons (e.g. TGA fat print underlined).
  • Black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences Black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences.
  • FIG. 5 A mouse C ⁇ insertion
  • the locus (top line) is the same as in FIG. 3 .
  • the bottom shows the sequence at the 5′ end of the C ⁇ exon (blue in top line) with the amino acid coding written above the bases.
  • the GG base pair at the start is immediately flanking the splice acceptor site coding for the amino acid R after splicing.
  • the middle line shows the insertion of a 46 basepair insertion containing a lox sequence (blue and red inverted repeat sequence) and 4 stop codons, which also puts the codon usage of the constant region out of frame and creating downstream stop codons (e.g. TGA fat print underlined).
  • Black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences Black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences.
  • FIG. 6A A mouse C ⁇ constant region stop codon and frame shift insertion
  • the locus (top line) is the same as in FIG. 3 .
  • the bottom shows part of the sequence of the C ⁇ exon (black) with the amino acid coding written above the bases.
  • the middle line shows part of the sequence of the C ⁇ coding region.
  • the line above it shows the insertion of a 44 basepair insertion containing a lox sequence (blue and red inverted repeat sequence), 3 stop codons, which also puts the codon usage of the constant region out of frame and creating downstream stop codons (TAA).
  • Black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences, the Hpa I site used for the insertion is shown in red.
  • FIG. 6B Recombination in ES cells to disable C ⁇
  • the gel shows the result of a PCR amplification over the insertion site of a number of the clones of the C ⁇ recombination in ES cells illustrated in FIG. 13A .
  • Clones 351 and 623 are positive and will be injected into blastocysts to generate Ig ⁇ negative mice.
  • FIG. 7 The human Ig ⁇ locus.
  • the map is copied from the IMGT database (http://imgt.cines.f).
  • the scale is in kilobases (kb). Green squares, functional V ⁇ segments; red and yellow squares, non-functional V ⁇ segments; orange squares, J ⁇ segments; blue squares, constant region; black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences.
  • FIG. 8 Generation of a hybrid human/rat Ig ⁇ locus for transgenesis
  • the 3′ end of the locus is obtained from the mouse (yellow) containing the mouse ⁇ 3′ enhancer (yellow).
  • the mouse constant coding sequences are replaced with those of the rat, including its 5′ enhancer obtained by long range PCR from rat genomic DNA (red).
  • the human segment downstream from V ⁇ 4-1 through to the human J ⁇ sequences are obtained from the mouse (yellow) to maintain the proper spacing between the V and J regions.
  • the human J ⁇ segments are obtained from a PAC covering this part of the human locus (green).
  • the green squares are V ⁇ segments added individually or as a block (see text).
  • the puromycin resistance gene present in the PAC vector is in red, black circle ⁇ -enhancer and red circle ⁇ -LCR sequences.
  • FIG. 9 A map of the V H 4 heavy chain locus
  • This locus containing a neomycin selectable marker at the 5′ end is used as the starting material for the construction of the human/mouse hybrid locus.
  • This locus is built as described in WO2008/035216. The scale is in kilobases. The locus contains four V H regions (1-46, 3-53, 3-23, 3-11), all of the human D segments, all of the human J segments and IgG constant regions and the 3′ human IgH LCR.
  • FIG. 10 Generation of a 4 V H human/rat constant region IgH locus
  • a CeuI site present in the V H 4 human locus ( FIG. 6 ) is used to generate a human/rat locus by adding the rat constant coding and switch regions that have been amplified by PCR from rat genomic DNA.
  • the mouse LCR region is amplified from mouse genomic DNA as several fragments which are first cloned together to generate the complete mouse IgH LCR.
  • the 5′ end of the human V H 4 locus containing the 4 V H segments, all of the human D and all the human J segments ( FIG. 6 ). All human sequences are in blue, all mouse sequences in light green, the rat sequences in red and the neomycin resistance gene is shown in purple.
  • FIG. 11 Deletion of the Ig ⁇ enhancers comprising the ⁇ LCR
  • the ⁇ locus enhancers are removed by homologous recombination using standard replacement vectors using the hygromycin resistance gene flanked by sequences homologous to the regions flanking the enhancer 2-4 and the blasticin S resistance gene flanked by segments homologous to the regions flanking the 4-10 enhancer. Replacement results in a ⁇ locus that has lost the enhancers and shows decreased expression.
  • Hygromycin resistance gene is shown in red, the blasticin S resistance gene in orange.
  • the mouse V ⁇ segments are in green, the J segments in yellow and the constant regions in blue.
  • the maps are copied from the IGMT database.
  • FIG. 12 A human rat V ⁇ locus for transgenesis
  • the locus is the same as in FIG. 8 , but additional human V ⁇ segments have been added to the locus.
  • the resulting locus contains all of the frequently and moderately frequently used human V ⁇ segments.
  • Green circle and green line murine ⁇ -enhancer and intron; red square and circle, rat ⁇ -constant region and enhancer; blue squares, human V H segments; dark blue, puromycin selectable marker.
  • FIG. 13A Generation of a human rat hybrid locus
  • the locus is generated by ligating V H regions together to a concatemer of 17 consecutive human V H regions cloned between SceI sites.
  • a mouse spacer region is added to a human 40 kb fragment containing all the human D H and J H segments to keep the appropriate distance between the D H and V H segments.
  • This is followed by the addition of a V H 6-1 segment containing an SceI site.
  • the concatemer is then added onto the V H 6-1.
  • the various rat constant regions and the murine LCR are added at the 3′ side.
  • the resulting locus contains all of the frequently and moderately frequently used human V H segments.
  • FIG. 13B The starting construct of the human/rat IgH locus
  • the gel shows the result of the first steps of the human rat IgH locus construction after the addition of V H 6-1.
  • the lanes on the right show a NotI digest of two of the cloned plasmids.
  • the lanes (NotI ⁇ MluI) show the plasmid in lane 1 to have the correct orientation in the vector, whereas the plasmid in lane 2 has the wrong orientation.
  • the lane 1 plasmid is used for the next step in the generation of the locus.
  • FIG. 13C Concatemer of V H segments
  • the gel shows an XhoI/SalI digest of a concatemer of 17 different V H regions.
  • the marker lane contains a ⁇ phage DNA digested with BstEII.
  • FIG. 14 Transgenic human rat heavy chain immunoglobulin loci.
  • FIG. 15 Human/rat ⁇ transgenic light chain locus
  • a human/rat locus An example of a human/rat locus is shown. Its 3′ end is obtained from the mouse (yellow) containing the mouse ⁇ 3′ LCR (yellow). The mouse constant coding sequences are replaced with those of the rat by long range PCR from rat genomic DNA (red). The human segment downstream from V ⁇ 2-14 through to the human J ⁇ sequences are obtained from the mouse (yellow) to maintain the proper spacing between the V and J regions. The human J ⁇ segments are obtained by long range PCR of a human PAC covering this part of the human locus (blue). The blue squares are V ⁇ segments added individually or as a block. The hygromycin resistance gene present in the PAC vector is in purple.
  • transgenic mice are generated that express hybrid human/rat heavy chain and light chain loci as transgenes introduced by microinjection in fertilised eggs, a routine transgenesis procedure.
  • the egg-donating mice are modified to have no or very low expression of the endogenous mouse heavy chain genes and mouse light chain genes.
  • mice which have the IgH locus and only the endogenous ⁇ locus inactivated or in mice which have the IgH and ⁇ locus inactivated and the regulatory sequences of the ⁇ locus removed to lower the expression of the ⁇ locus even further.
  • iPS cells induced pluripotent stem cells
  • modifications are carried out in somatic cells or somatic stem cells which are subsequently reprogrammed into iPS cells to generate modified mice.
  • modified hematopoietic stem cells could be transplanted into recipient mice lacking B cells to generate human or human hybrid antibodies.
  • the IgH locus ( FIG. 1A ) is inactivated by a strategy similar to that published by Kitamura and Rajewsky with the difference that the stop codon is introduced into the C ⁇ regions at a position one amino acid before that described by Kitamura et al. (1991) Nature, 350, 423-426.
  • ES (or iPS) cells were transfected with a construct that changes the second codon of the first membrane exon of the mouse IgM gene into a stop codon. This involves routine procedure including a neo selection for transfection.
  • a SpeI site was included in the recombination sequences to be able to monitor the successful recombination ( FIG. 1B ).
  • ES cells are subsequently screened by Southern blots to confirm successful recombinant clones. This resulted in 10 correct recombinants (e.g. FIG. 1C ). Of these, 3 were injected into mouse blastocysts to obtain chimeras which were subsequently bred to obtain mice that are homozygous for the IgH mutation. FACS analysis (B220 versus CD19) of the B cells of such mice shows the absence of B cells in peripheral blood ( FIG. 1D ). The mice were subsequently crossed with recombinase-expressing mice to remove the neo gene ( FIG. 1E ). Similarly, the mouse Ig ⁇ locus ( FIG.
  • mice 2 is inactivated or reduced by recombination in ES cells ( FIG. 2 , 3 , 4 - 6 ).
  • the resulting ⁇ inactivated mice are crossed to the heavy chain KO mice.
  • a knock down of the activity is achieved by replacing the 3′ ⁇ gene LCR with a neo resistance marker flanked by lox sites ( FIG. 3 ).
  • the neo gene is optionally removed by treatment with recombinase.
  • Blocking of the activity of the ⁇ gene can be achieved by using homologous recombination in ES cells or iPS cells to insert into the 5′ end of the C ⁇ exon a neo gene flanked by lox sites ( FIG. 4 ) or by inserting a neo gene flanked by lox sites and an additional sequence coding for stop codons ( FIGS. 5 and 6A ). Treatment of the recombined ES cells with cre will leave the sequence out of frame ( FIG. 4 ) or additionally contain new stop codons ( FIG. 5-6A ). FIG.
  • FIG. 6B shows a recombination result in ES cells after transfection of the construct shown in FIG. 6A , resulting in two ES cells clones that have one C ⁇ allele inactivated (5 such clones were obtained in total).
  • the cells are treated with recombinase by a standard transient transfection with an actin-driven recombinase plasmid to remove the region between the two lox sites.
  • the cells are subsequently used to generate mice by routine methods and the progeny bred to obtain homozygous mice.
  • Such mice comprise B-cells in which the assembly of immunoglobulin tetramers comprising kappa light chains is substantially impaired or completely blocked.
  • V ⁇ genes of the human Ig ⁇ locus are amplified by standard PCR and subcloned between XhoI/SalI sites, as described previously for human V H segments. This allows the multimerisation of the V ⁇ regions, keeping the multimer between XhoI and SalI sites.
  • the 3′ end of the mouse ⁇ locus, including the 3′ ⁇ enhancer, and the rat constant (C ⁇ ) region plus the rat 5′ enhancer are cloned together ( FIG. 8 ).
  • the human J ⁇ region and the region (17 kb) from between mouse V ⁇ and J ⁇ are cloned in to maintain the normal spacing between V ⁇ regions and J ⁇ .
  • the human V ⁇ are inserted into the PAC ( FIG. 8 ) containing a puromycin selectable marker by routine procedures (e.g. Janssens et al. (2006), supra).
  • V ⁇ segments 4-1, 3-11, 3-15, 3-20 and 1-39 are multimerized and ligated into the PAC vector containing the human J regions and the mouse enhancers and rat C ⁇ regions.
  • the starting material is a human PAC containing 4 human V H regions, all of the human D H and J H segments and two human constant regions and the human LCR ( FIG. 9 and UK patent application No 0905023.8).
  • the latter PAC has a unique CeuI meganuclease site in between the J regions and the constant regions.
  • this CeuI site is used to remove the human 3′ end sequence and replace these with rat constant and switch regions (C ⁇ , C ⁇ 3, C ⁇ 1 and C ⁇ 2). These have been amplified by standard long range PCR from rat genomic DNA.
  • the mouse heavy chain LCR is added. This regulatory sequence is amplified from mouse genomic DNA in three parts, subcloned together to restore the complete LCR and added to the 3′ side of the rat constant regions ( FIG. 10 ).
  • the resulting hybrid IgH locus thus contains a neo selection marker, human V, D and J regions and rat constant regions with mouse regulatory sequences.
  • hybrid loci inserts are subsequently isolated from the PAC as large DNA fragments and injected into fertilized mouse eggs derived from the IgH/Ig ⁇ heterozygous or homozygous null mice to generate mice that are transgenic for the human/rat hybrid IgH and Ig ⁇ loci. All of this is done by routine methods (e.g. Janssens et al. (2006), supra).
  • mice The hybrid IgH and hybrid Ig ⁇ transgenic mice are subsequently bred to obtain mice that are homozygous null for the endogenous mouse IgH and Ig ⁇ expression and positive for the human/rat hybrid IgH and Ig ⁇ expression. These mice are subsequently immunized to generate antigen-specific hybrid human/rat H 2 L 2 antibodies by routine procedures.
  • double selection in puromycin and neomycin will ensure that only myeloma fusions containing both an IgH and an Ig ⁇ locus will selected for.
  • hybrid transgenic mice such as the use of different vectors, different selection markers, different recombination positions to inactivate the mouse genes or variations in the actual (routine) cloning strategy of the hybrid loci.
  • the same procedure can be used to generate any normal or hybrid locus using immunoglobulin DNA derived from any single mammalian species, or hybrid loci derived using DNA from two or more species.
  • Example 2 This example is in principle the same as Example 1 with the exception that the high frequency of obtaining IgH/Ig ⁇ H 2 L 2 antibodies is increased even further by lowering the frequency of expression of the endogenous mouse Ig ⁇ locus. This can be achieved by replacing the regulatory regions of both Ig ⁇ with a selectable marker ( FIG. 11 ), in this case the hygromycin resistance gene and the TK-BSD gene.
  • a selectable marker FIG. 11
  • the resulting transgenic mice would contain the hybrid human rat IgH and Ig ⁇ loci, be negative for endogenous mouse IgH and Ig ⁇ (or express C ⁇ at very low levels) and express Ig ⁇ at very low levels.
  • the hybridomas expressing only human rat hybrid H2L2 antibodies would be selected for expression of the transgenic hybrid loci by neo ( FIG. 10 ) and puro ( FIG. 8 ) selection.
  • Example 3 is analogous to the Examples described above but the hybrid Ig ⁇ locus would be extended by the addition of V ⁇ segments that are used less frequently ( FIG. 12 ; V ⁇ 1-9, 1-33, 2-30, 2-28, 1-27, 1-5).
  • V ⁇ segments that are used less frequently
  • mutated/modified V ⁇ segments or V ⁇ segments could be added in addition.
  • the addition of further segments would be carried out by using the same XhoI/SalI cloning strategy described above. Immunization of mice generated in this example would allow a greater complexity in response to the immunization with antigen.
  • the number of V L regions could be varied further by adding other V ⁇ segments or the use of combinations of all of the above V L segments.
  • Example 4 is analogous to that described in the examples described above, but here the hybrid human/rat IgH locus has been generated by using 18 V H segments and 5 rat constant regions ( FIG. 13A ; human V H 6-1, 1-2, 4-4, 2-5, 3-07, 1-8, 4-39, 3-15, 1-18, 3-23, 3-30, 3-33, 3-48, 4-34, 3-49, 3-53, 4-59, 1-69).
  • First a central 70 kb DJ region of the human locus is extended at the 5′ end with 8 kb from the mouse IgH intron to maintain the proper distance between V H segments and the D region.
  • V H region (6-1) of 10 kb with an artificial SceI meganuclease site is cloned at the 5′ end of the mouse intron sequences ( FIG. 10B ).
  • all the remaining V H region are cloned together by slotting in XhoI/SalI V H segments as described above ( FIG. 10C ).
  • CTCF sites One could also add to these loci more V H segments or V H segments that have been modified/mutated.
  • CTCF sites In the example shown, three such sites have been used. They are obtained by long range PCR of the V H region including the upstream CTCF site.
  • the rat C a has been added when compared to the locus in FIG. 10 .
  • V H multimer is cloned into the VH6-1DJ plasmid, after which the rat constant regions are added to complete the locus.
  • V segments as part of additional heavy or light chain transgenic loci present in the same mouse. Since all the loci are subject to allelic exclusion (see WO2007/096779), only the preferred rearrangement will be selected in vivo following antigen challenge, resulting in B-cell expansion and the accumulation of antibody in serum.
  • FIG. 14 shows an example of two heavy chain gene loci that can be introduced into the same animal and each will be used through allelic exclusion. Obviously, more V H segments could be added (including modified V H segments) or even more loci could be introduced to increase the complexity of the transgenic immune repertoire. The method could also be applied to other species using V segments specific for these species.
  • the diversity of the human/rat hybrid antibody is increased even further by the addition of a human/rat Ig ⁇ locus through breeding to the mice that carry human/rat IgH and/or Ig ⁇ loci described in the examples above.
  • the human/rat hybrid ⁇ locus is generated very much as described for the human/rat Ig ⁇ locus described in the previous examples. The difference is caused by the fact that J ⁇ and C ⁇ regions occur in pairs and hence 2 rat C ⁇ regions are cloned onto 2 human J ⁇ regions ( FIG. 15 ). The spacing between the V ⁇ and J ⁇ segments is maintained by cloning the normal mouse sequences that occur in that position (see FIG. 11 ).
  • LCR human J ⁇ and rat C ⁇ segments are used together with four human V x , segments. Together, these cover more than 80% of the human Ig ⁇ response.
  • the regulatory sequences (LCR, FIG. 15 ) are derived from the mouse to ensure optimal expression, and a selectable marker is added at the 5′ end of the locus. As described above, the locus is isolated as a restriction fragment and injected into fertilised eggs to generate mice carrying the transgenic ⁇ locus.
  • V H , V L , D, J and constant regions from different species can be used to generate other single species antibodies or hybrid species antibodies. It will also be apparent to one skilled in the art that, once an antigen-specific antibody has been identified, the V H DJ and V L J regions can be cloned onto alternative constant regions from the same species or from different species by completely routine methods.

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