ANTIBODY
ENGINEERING & PHAGE DISPLAY
November 6 - 19, 2013
Application Deadline: July 15, 2013
Instructors:
Carlos
Barbas, Scripps Research Institute
Don
Siegel, University of Pennsylvania Medical Center
Gregg
Silverman, New York University School of Medicine
See
the Roll of Honor
- who's taken the course in the past
Recent advances in the generation and selection of antibodies
from combinatorial libraries allow for the rapid production
of antibodies from immune and non-immune sources. This intensive
laboratory/lecture course will focus on the construction
of combinatorial antibody libraries expressed on the surface
of phage and selection of desired antibodies from the library.
Students will learn the theoretical and practical aspects
of constructing combinatorial libraries from immune and
non-immune sources as well as the construction of synthetic
antibody libraries. Antibodies will be selected from the
library by panning. Production, purification and characterization
of Fab fragments expressed in E.coli will also
be covered. Epitopes will be selected from peptide libraries
and characterized.
The
lecture series, presented by a number of invited speakers,
will emphasize PCR of immunoglobulin genes, the biology
of filamentous phage and the utility of surface expression
libraries, expression of antibodies in E.coli and
mammalian cells, antibody structure and function, catalytic
antibodies, directed protein evolution, retroviral and cell
display libraries, the immunobiology of the antibody response,
and recent results on the use of antibodies in therapy.The
theory and practical implications for selection from phage
displayed libraries of random peptides, cDNA products and
semi-synthetic proteins will also be explored.
This
course is supported with funds provided by the Howard
Hughes Medical Institute