Epitope binning

Epitope binning is a competitive immunoassay used to characterize and then sort a library of monoclonal antibodies against a target protein.[1] Antibodies against a similar target are tested against all other antibodies in the library in a pairwise fashion to see if antibodies block one another’s binding to the epitope of an antigen.[2] After each antibody has a profile created against all of the other antibodies in the library, a competitive blocking profile is created for each antibody relative to the others in the library. Closely related binning profiles indicate that the antibodies have the same or a closely related epitope and are “binned” together.[2] Epitope Binning is referenced in the literature under different names such as epitope mapping and epitope characterization.[2] Regardless of the naming, epitope binning is prevalent in the pharmaceutical industry.[2] Epitope Binning is used in the discovery and development of new therapeutics, vaccines, and diagnostics.[3]

See also

References

  1. Abdiche, Y. N.; D. S. Malashock; A. Pinkerton; J. Pons (March 2009). "Exploring blocking assays using Octet, ProteOn, and Biacore biosensors". Analytical Biochemistry. 386 (2): 172–180. doi:10.1016/j.ab.2008.11.038. PMID 19111520.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Brooks, B.D. (2014). "The Importance of Epitope Binning in Drug Discovery". Current Drug Discovery Technology. 11.
  3. Estep, P.; Reid F; Nauman C; Liu Y; Sun T; Sun J; Xu Y. (2013). "High throughput solution-based measurement of antibody-antigen affinity and epitope binning.". MAbs. 5 (2).


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