Measuring antibody-antigen binding kinetics using surface plasmon resonance

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Abstract

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is now widely embraced as a technology for monitoring a diverse range of protein-protein interactions and is considered almost de rigueur for characterizing antibody-antigen interactions. The technique obviates the need to label either of the interacting species and the binding event is visualized in real-time. Thus, it is ideally suited for screening crude, unpurified antibody samples that dominate early candidate panels following antibody selection campaigns. SPR returns both concentration and affinity data but when used correctly can also resolve the discrete component kinetic parameters (association and dissociation rate constants) of the affinity interaction. Herein, we outline some SPR-based generic antibody screening configurations and methodologies in the context of expediting data-rich ranking of candidate antibody panels and ensuring that antibodies with the optimal kinetic binding characteristics are reliably identified. © 2012 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Hearty, S., Leonard, P., & O’Kennedy, R. (2012). Measuring antibody-antigen binding kinetics using surface plasmon resonance. Methods in Molecular Biology, 907, 411–442. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-61779-974-7_24

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