Rapid isolation of antigen-specific B-cells using droplet microfluidics

Citation:

Ding, R. ; Hung, K. - C. ; Mitra, A. ; Ung, L. W. ; Lightwood, D. ; Tu, R. ; Starkie, D. ; Cai, L. ; Mazutis, L. ; Chong, S. ; et al. Rapid isolation of antigen-specific B-cells using droplet microfluidics. RSC Advances 2020, 10, 27006-27013. Copy at http://www.tinyurl.com/y5ztufpa
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Abstract:

Monoclonal antibodies are powerful tools for scientific research and are the basis of numerous therapeutics. However, traditional approaches to generate monoclonal antibodies against a desired target, such as hybridoma-based techniques and display library methods, are laborious and suffer from fusion inefficiency and display bias, respectively. Here we present a platform, featuring droplet microfluidics and a bead-based binding assay, to rapidly identify and verify antigen-binding antibody sequences from primary cells. We used a defined mixture of hybridoma cells to characterize the system, sorting droplets at up to 100 Hz and isolating desired hybridoma cells, comprising 0.1% of the input, with a false positive rate of less than 1%. We then applied the system to once-frozen primary B-cells to isolate rare cells secreting target-binding antibody. We performed RT-PCR on individual sorted cells to recover the correctly paired heavy- and light-chain antibody sequences, and we used rapid cell-free protein synthesis to generate single-chain variable fragment-format (scFv) antibodies from fourteen of the sorted cells. Twelve of these showed antigen-specific binding by ELISA. Our platform facilitates screening animal B-cell repertoires within days at low cost, increasing both rate and range of discovering antigen-specific antibodies from living organisms. Further, these techniques can be adapted to isolate cells based on virtually any secreted product.

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