NOVEL METHODS OF CONSTRUCTING LIBRARIES COMPRISING DISPLAYED AND/OR EXPRESSED MEMBERS OF A DIVERSE FAMILY OF PEPTIDES, POLYPEPTIDES OR PROTEINS AND THE NOVEL LIBRARIES

Abstract
Methods useful in constructing libraries that collectively display and/or express members of diverse families of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and the libraries produced using those methods. Methods of screening those libraries and the peptides, polypeptides or proteins identified by such screens.
Description

The present invention relates to libraries of genetic packages that display and/or express a member of a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and collectively display and/or express at least a portion of the diversity of the family. In an alternative embodiment, the invention relates to libraries that include a member of a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and collectively comprise at least a portion of the diversity of the family. In a preferred embodiment, the displayed and/or expressed polypeptides are human Fabs.


More specifically, the invention is directed to the methods of cleaving single-stranded nucleic acids at chosen locations, the cleaved nucleic acids encoding, at least in part, the peptides, polypeptides or proteins displayed on the genetic packages of, and/or expressed in, the libraries of the invention. In a preferred embodiment, the genetic packages are filamentous phage or phagemids or yeast.


The present invention further relates to vectors for displaying and/or expressing a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins.


The present invention further relates to methods of screening the libraries of the invention and to the peptides, polypeptides and proteins identified by such screening.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

It is now common practice in the art to prepare libraries of genetic packages that display, express or comprise a member of a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and collectively display, express or comprise at least a portion of the diversity of the family. In many common libraries, the peptides, polypeptides or proteins are related to antibodies. Often, they are Fabs or single chain antibodies.


In general, the DNAs that encode members of the families to be displayed and/or expressed must be amplified before they are cloned and used to display and/or express the desired member. Such amplification typically makes use of forward and backward primers.


Such primers can be complementary to sequences native to the DNA to be amplified or complementary to oligonucleotides attached at the 5′ or 3′ ends of that DNA. Primers that are complementary to sequences native to the DNA to be amplified are disadvantaged in that they bias the members of the families to be displayed. Only those members that contain a sequence in the native DNA that is substantially complementary to the primer will be amplified. Those that do not will be absent from the family. For those members that are amplified, any diversity within the primer region will be suppressed.


For example, in European patent 368,684 B1, the primer that is used is at the 5′ end of the VH region of an antibody gene. It anneals to a sequence region in the native DNA that is said to be “sufficiently well conserved” within a single species. Such primer will bias the members amplified to those having this “conserved” region. Any diversity within this region is extinguished.


It is generally accepted that human antibody genes arise through a process that involves a combinatorial selection of V and J or V, D, and J followed by somatic mutations. Although most diversity occurs in the Complementary Determining Regions (CDRs), diversity also occurs in the more conserved Framework Regions (FRs) and at least some of this diversity confers or enhances specific binding to antigens (Ag). As a consequence, libraries should contain as much of the CDR and FR diversity as possible.


To clone the amplified DNAs of the peptides, polypeptides or proteins that they encode for display on a genetic package and/or for expression, the DNAs must be cleaved to produce appropriate ends for ligation to a vector. Such cleavage is generally effected using restriction endonuclease recognition sites carried on the primers. When the primers are at the 5′ end of DNA produced from reverse transcription of RNA, such restriction leaves deleterious 5′ untranslated regions in the amplified DNA. These regions interfere with expression of the cloned genes and thus the display of the peptides, polypeptides and proteins coded for by them.


SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

It is an object of this invention to provide novel methods for constructing libraries that display, express or comprise a member of a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and collectively display, express or comprise at least a portion of the diversity of the family. These methods are not biased toward DNAs that contain native sequences that are complementary to the primers used for amplification. They also enable any sequences that may be deleterious to expression to be removed from the amplified DNA before cloning and displaying and/or expressing.


It is another object of this invention to provide a method for cleaving single-stranded nucleic acid sequences at a desired location, the method comprising the steps of:

    • (i) contacting the nucleic acid with a single-stranded oligonucleotide, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid in the region in which cleavage is desired and including a sequence that with its complement in the nucleic acid forms a restriction endonuclease recognition site that on restriction results in cleavage of the nucleic acid at the desired location; and
    • (ii) cleaving the nucleic acid solely at the recognition site formed by the complementation of the nucleic acid and the oligonucleotide;


      the contacting and the cleaving steps being performed at a temperature sufficient to maintain the nucleic acid in substantially single-stranded form, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location, and the cleavage being carried out using a restriction endonuclease that is active at the chosen temperature.


It is a further object of this invention to provide an alternative method for cleaving single-stranded nucleic acid sequences at a desired location, the method comprising the steps of:

    • (i) contacting the nucleic acid with a partially double-stranded oligonucleotide, the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid in the region in which cleavage is desired, and the double-stranded region of the oligonucleotide having a restriction endonuclease recognition site; and
    • (ii) cleaving the nucleic acid solely at the cleavage site formed by the complementation of the nucleic acid and the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide;


      the contacting and the cleaving steps being performed at a temperature sufficient to maintain the nucleic acid in substantially single-stranded form, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location, and the cleavage being carried out using a restriction endonuclease that is active at the chosen temperature.


In an alternative embodiment of this object of the invention, the restriction endonuclease recognition site is not initially located in the double-stranded part of the oligonucleotide. Instead, it is part of an amplification primer, which primer is complementary to the double-stranded region of the oligonucleotide. On amplification of the DNA-partially double-stranded combination, the restriction endonuclease recognition site carried on the primer becomes part of the DNA. It can then be used to cleave the DNA.


Preferably, the restriction endonuclease recognition site is that of a Type II-S restriction endonuclease whose cleavage site is located at a known distance from its recognition site.


It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of capturing DNA molecules that comprise a member of a diverse family of DNAs and collectively comprise at least a portion of the diversity of the family. These DNA molecules in single-stranded form have been cleaved by one of the methods of this invention. This method involves ligating the individual single-stranded DNA members of the family to a partially duplex DNA complex. The method comprises the steps of:

    • (i) contacting a single-stranded nucleic acid sequence that has been cleaved with a restriction endonuclease with a partially double-stranded oligonucleotide, the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid in the region that remains after cleavage, the double-stranded region of the oligonucleotide including any sequences necessary to return the sequences that remain after cleavage into proper reading frame for expression and containing a restriction endonuclease recognition site 5′ of those sequences; and
    • (ii) cleaving the partially double-stranded oligonucleotide sequence solely at the restriction endonuclease cleavage site contained within the double-stranded region of the partially double-stranded oligonucleotide.


As before, in this object of the invention, the restriction endonuclease recognition site need not be located in the double-stranded portion of the oligonucleotide. Instead, it can be introduced on amplification with an amplification primer that is used to amplify the DNA-partially double-stranded oligonucleotide combination.


It is another object of this invention to prepare libraries, that display, express or comprise a diverse family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins and collectively display, express or comprise at least part of the diversity of the family, using the methods and DNAs described above.


It is an object of this invention to screen those libraries to identify useful peptides, polypeptides and proteins and to use those substances in human therapy.


Additional objects of the invention are reflected in the original claims. Each of these claims is specifically incorporated by reference in this specification.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a schematic of various methods that may be employed to amplify VH genes without using primers specific for VH sequences. The T15 oligonucleotide is shown in SEQ ID NO: 622.



FIG. 2 is a schematic of various methods that may be employed to amplify VL genes without using primers specific for VL sequences.



FIG. 3 is a schematic of RACE amplification of antibody heavy and light chains.



FIG. 4 depicts gel analysis of amplification products obtained after the primary PCR reaction from 4 different patient samples.



FIG. 5 depicts gel analysis of cleaved kappa DNA from Example 2.



FIG. 6 depicts gel analysis of extender-cleaved kappa DNA from Example 2.



FIG. 7 depicts gel analysis of the PCR product from the extender-kappa amplification from Example 2.



FIG. 8 depicts gel analysis of purified PCR product from the extender-kappa amplification from Example 2.



FIG. 9 depicts gel analysis of cleaved and ligated kappa light chains from Example 2.



FIG. 10 is a schematic of the design for CDR1 and CDR2 synthetic diversity (SEQ ID NOs: 636 and 637, respectively). The YADSVKG peptide is shown as SEQ ID NO: 604.



FIG. 11 is a schematic of the cloning schedule for construction of the heavy chain repertoire.



FIG. 12 is a schematic of the cleavage and ligation of the antibody light chains. A: cleavage of the antibody light chains; B: ligation of the cleaved antibody light chains



FIG. 13 depicts gel analysis of cleaved and ligated lambda light chains from Example 4.



FIG. 14 is a schematic of the cleavage and ligation of the antibody heavy chain. A:CJ cleavage of heavy chains; B: ligation of heavy chain CDR3 diversity.



FIG. 15 depicts gel analysis of cleaved and ligated lambda light chains from Example 5.



FIG. 16 is a schematic of a phage display vector.



FIG. 17 is a schematic of a Fab cassette.



FIG. 18 is a schematic of a process for incorporating fixed FR1 residues in an antibody lambda sequence. The PCRpr oligonucleotide is shown in SEQ ID NO: 605 while the Bridge oligonucleotide and encoded peptide are shown in SEQ ID NOs: 606-607, respectively.



FIG. 19 is a schematic of a process for incorporating fixed FR1 residues in an antibody kappa sequence (see SEQ ID NOs: 608-611, respectively, in order of appearance)



FIG. 20 is a schematic of a process for incorporating fixed FR1 residues in an antibody heavy chain sequence. The PCRpr oligonucleotide is shown in SEQ ID NO: 612. The Bridge oligonucleotides are shown in SEQ ID NOs: 613 and 615, respectively, in order of appearance, while the encoded peptides are shown in SEQ ID NOs: 614 and 615, respectively, in order of appearance.





TERMS

In this application, the following terms and abbreviations are used:


















Sense strand
The upper strand of ds DNA as




usually written. In the sense




strand, 5′-ATG-3′ codes for




Met.



Antisense strand
The lower strand of ds DNA as




usually written. In the




antisense strand, 3′-TAC-5′




would correspond to a Met




codon in the sense strand.



Forward primer
A “forward” primer is




complementary to a part of the




sense strand and primes for




synthesis of a new antisense-




strand molecule. “Forward




primer” and “lower-strand




primer” are equivalent.



Backward primer
A “backward” primer is




complementary to a part of the




antisense strand and primes




for synthesis of a new sense-




strand molecule. “Backward




primer” and “top-strand




primer” are equivalent.



Bases
Bases are specified either by




their position in a vector or




gene as their position within




a gene by codon and base. For




example, “89.1” is the first




base of codon 89, 89.2 is the




second base of codon 89.



Sv
Streptavidin



Ap
Ampicillin



apR
A gene conferring ampicillin




resistance.



RERS
Restriction endonuclease




recognition site



RE
Restriction endonuclease-




cleaves preferentially at RERS



URE
Universal restriction




endonuclease



Functionally
Two sequences are sufficiently



complementary
complementary so as to anneal




under the chosen conditions.



AA
Amino acid



PCR
Polymerization chain reaction



GLGs
Germline genes



Ab
Antibody: an immunoglobin.




The term also covers any




protein having a binding




domain which is homologous to




an immunoglobin binding




domain. A few examples of




antibodies within this




definition are, inter alia,




immunoglobin isotypes and the




Fab, F(ab1)2, scfv, Fv, dAb and




Fd fragments.



Fab
Two chain molecule comprising




an Ab light chain and part of




a heavy-chain.



scFv
A single-chain Ab comprising




either VH::linker::VL or




VL::linker::VH



w.t.
Wild type



HC
Heavy chain



LC
Light chain



VK
A variable domain of a Kappa




light chain.



VH
A variable domain of a heavy




chain.



VL
A variable domain of a lambda




light chain.










In this application when it is said that nucleic acids are cleaved solely at the cleavage site of a restriction endonuclease, it should be understood that minor cleavage may occur at random, e.g., at non-specific sites other than the specific cleavage site that is characteristic of the restriction endonuclease. The skilled worker will recognize that such non-specific, random cleavage is the usual occurrence. Accordingly, “solely at the cleavage site” of a restriction endonuclease means that cleavage occurs preferentially at the site characteristic of that endonuclease.


As used in this application and claims, the term “cleavage site formed by the complementation of the nucleic acid and the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide” includes cleavage sites formed by the single-stranded portion of the partially double-stranded ologonucleotide duplexing with the single-stranded DNA, cleavage sites in the double-stranded portion of the partially double-stranded oligonucleotide, and cleavage sites introduced by the amplification primer used to amplify the single-stranded DNA-partially double-stranded oligonucleotide combination.


In the two methods of this invention for preparing single-stranded nucleic acid sequences, the first of those cleavage sites is preferred. In the methods of this invention for capturing diversity and cloning a family of diverse nucleic acid sequences, the latter two cleavage sites are preferred.


In this application, all references referred to are specifically incorporated by reference.


DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The nucleic acid sequences that are useful in the methods of this invention, i.e., those that encode at least in part the individual peptides, polypeptides and proteins displayed, or expressed in or comprising the libraries of this invention, may be native, synthetic or a combination thereof. They may be mRNA, DNA or cDNA. In the preferred embodiment, the nucleic acids encode antibodies. Most preferably, they encode Fabs.


The nucleic acids useful in this invention may be naturally diverse, synthetic diversity may be introduced into those naturally diverse members, or the diversity may be entirely synthetic. For example, synthetic diversity can be introduced into one or more CDRs of antibody genes. Preferably, it is introduced into CDR1 and CDR2 of immunoglobulins. Preferably, natural diversity is captured in the CDR3 regions of the immunoglogin genes of this invention from B cells. Most preferably, the nucleic acids of this invention comprise a population of immunoglobin genes that comprise synthetic diversity in at least one, and more preferably both of the CDR1 and CDR2 and diversity in CDR3 captured from B cells.


Synthetic diversity may be created, for example, through the use of TRIM technology (U.S. Pat. No. 5,869,644). TRIM technology allows control over exactly which amino-acid types are allowed at variegated positions and in what proportions. In TRIM technology, codons to be diversified are synthesized using mixtures of trinucleotides. This allows any set of amino acid types to be included in any proportion.


Another alternative that may be used to generate diversified DNA is mixed oligonucleotide synthesis. With TRIM technology, one could allow Ala and Trp. With mixed oligonucleotide synthesis, a mixture that included Ala and Trp would also necessarily include Ser and Gly. The amino-acid types allowed at the variegated positions are picked with reference to the structure of antibodies, or other peptides, polypeptides or proteins of the family, the observed diversity in germline genes, the observed somatic mutations frequently observed, and the desired areas and types of variegation.


In a preferred embodiment of this invention, the nucleic acid sequences for at least one CDR or other region of the peptides, polypeptides or proteins of the family are cDNAs produced by reverse transcription from mRNA. More preferably, the mRNAs are obtained from peripheral blood cells, bone marrow cells, spleen cells or lymph node cells (such as B-lymphocytes or plasma cells) that express members of naturally diverse sets of related genes. More preferable, the mRNAs encode a diverse family of antibodies. Most preferably, the mRNAs are obtained from patients suffering from at least one autoimmune disorder or cancer. Preferably, mRNAs containing a high diversity of autoimmune diseases, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, antiphospholipid syndrome and vasculitis are used.


In a preferred embodiment of this invention, the cDNAs are produced from the mRNAs using reverse transcription. In this preferred embodiment, the mRNAs are separated from the cell and degraded using standard methods, such that only the full length (i.e., capped) mRNAs remain. The cap is then removed and reverse transcription used to produce the cDNAs.


The reverse transcription of the first (antisense) strand can be done in any manner with any suitable primer. See, e.g., H J de Haard et al., Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(26):18218-30 (1999). In the preferred embodiment of this invention where the mRNAs encode antibodies, primers that are complementary to the constant regions of antibody genes may be used. Those primers are useful because they do not generate bias toward subclasses of antibodies. In another embodiment, poly-dT primers may be used (and may be preferred for the heavy-chain genes). Alternatively, sequences complementary to the primer may be attached to the termini of the antisense strand.


In one preferred embodiment of this invention, the reverse transcriptase primer may be biotinylated, thus allowing the cDNA product to be immobilized on streptavidin (Sv) beads. Immobilization can also be effected using a primer labeled at the 5′ end with one of a) free amine group, b) thiol, c) carboxylic acid, or d) another group not found in DNA that can react to form a strong bond to a known partner on an insoluble medium. If, for example, a free amine (preferably primary amine) is provided at the 5′ end of a DNA primer, this amine can be reacted with carboxylic acid groups on a polymer bead using standard amide-forming chemistry. If such preferred immobilization is used during reverse transcription, the top strand RNA is degraded using well-known enzymes, such as a combination of RNAseH and RNAseA, either before or after immobilization.


The nucleic acid sequences useful in the methods of this invention are generally amplified before being used to display and/or express the peptides, polypeptides or proteins that they encode. Prior to amplification, the single-stranded DNAs may be cleaved using either of the methods described before. Alternatively, the single-stranded DNAs may be amplified and then cleaved using one of those methods.


Any of the well known methods for amplifying nucleic acid sequences may be used for such amplification. Methods that maximize, and do not bias, diversity are preferred. In a preferred embodiment of this invention where the nucleic acid sequences are derived from antibody genes, the present invention preferably utilizes primers in the constant regions of the heavy and light chain genes and primers to a synthetic sequence that are attached at the 5′ end of the sense strand. Priming at such synthetic sequence avoids the use of sequences within the variable regions of the antibody genes. Those variable region priming sites generate bias against V genes that are either of rare subclasses or that have been mutated at the priming sites. This bias is partly due to suppression of diversity within the primer region and partly due to lack of priming when many mutations are present in the region complementary to the primer. The methods disclosed in this invention have the advantage of not biasing the population of amplified antibody genes for particular V gene types.


The synthetic sequences may be attached to the 5′ end of the DNA strand by various methods well known for ligating DNA sequences together. RT CapExtention is one preferred method.


In RT CapExtention (derived from Smart PCR™), a short overlap (5′- . . . GGG-3′ in the upper-strand primer (USP-GGG) complements 3′-CCC . . . 5′ in the lower strand) and reverse transcriptases are used so that the reverse complement of the upper-strand primer is attached to the lower strand.



FIGS. 1 and 2 show schematics to amplify VH and VL genes using RT CapExtention. FIG. 1 shows a schematic of the amplification of VH genes. FIG. 1, Panel A shows a primer specific to the poly-dT region of the 3′ UTR priming synthesis of the first, lower strand. Primers that bind in the constant region are also suitable. Panel B shows the lower strand extended at its 3′ end by three Cs that are not complementary to the mRNA. Panel C shows the result of annealing a synthetic top-strand primer ending in three GGGs that hybridize to the 3′ terminal CCCs and extending the reverse transcription extending the lower strand by the reverse complement of the synthetic primer sequence. Panel D shows the result of PCR amplification using a 5′ biotinylated synthetic top-strand primer that replicates the 5′ end of the synthetic primer of panel C and a bottom-strand primer complementary to part of the constant domain. Panel E shows immobilized double-stranded (ds) cDNA obtained by using a 5′-biotinylated top-strand primer.



FIG. 2 shows a similar schematic for amplification of VL genes. FIG. 2, Panel A shows a primer specific to the constant region at or near the 3′ end priming synthesis of the first, lower strand. Primers that bind in the poly-dT region are also suitable. Panel B shows the lower strand extended at its 3′ end by three Cs that are not complementary to the mRNA. Panel C shows the result of annealing a synthetic top-strand primer ending in three GGGs that hybridize to the 3′ terminal CCCs and extending the reverse transcription extending the lower strand by the reverse complement of the synthetic primer sequence. Panel D shows the result of PCR amplification using a 5′ biotinylated synthetic top-strand primer that replicates the 5′ end of the synthetic primer of panel C and a bottom-strand primer complementary to part of the constant domain. The bottom-strand primer also contains a useful restriction endonuclease site, such as AscI. Panel E shows immobilized ds cDNA obtained by using a 5′-biotinylated top-strand primer.


In FIGS. 1 and 2, each V gene consists of a 5′ untranslated region (UTR) and a secretion signal, followed by the variable region, followed by a constant region, followed by a 3′ untranslated region (which typically ends in poly-A). An initial primer for reverse transcription may be complementary to the constant region or to the poly A segment of the 3′-UTR. For human heavy-chain genes, a primer of 15 T is preferred. Reverse transcriptases attach several C residues to the 3′ end of the newly synthesized DNA. RT CapExtention exploits this feature. The reverse transcription reaction is first run with only a lower-strand primer. After about 1 hour, a primer ending in GGG (USP-GGG) and more RTase are added. This causes the lower-strand cDNA to be extended by the reverse complement of the USP-GGG up to the final GGG. Using one primer identical to part of the attached synthetic sequence and a second primer complementary to a region of known sequence at the 3′ end of the sense strand, all the V genes are amplified irrespective of their V gene subclass.


In another preferred embodiment, synthetic sequences may be added by Rapid Amplification of cDNA Ends (RACE) (see Frohman, M. A., Dush, M. K., & Martin, G. R. (1988) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (85): 8998-9002).



FIG. 1 shows a schematic of RACE amplification of antibody heavy and light chains. First, mRNA is selected by treating total or poly(A+) RNA with calf intestinal phosphatase (CIP) to remove the 5′-phosphate from all molecules that have them such as ribosomal RNA, fragmented mRNA, tRNA and genomic DNA. Full length mRNA (containing a protective 7-methyl cap structure) is uneffected. The RNA is then treated with tobacco acid pyrophosphatase (TAP) to remove the cap structure from full length mRNAs leaving a 5′-monophosphate group. Next, a synthetic RNA adaptor is ligated to the RNA population, only molecules which have a 5-phosphate (uncapped, full length mRNAs) will accept the adaptor. Reverse trascriptase reactions using an oligodT primer, and nested PCR (using one adaptor primer (located in the 5′ synthetic adaptor) and one primer for the gene) are then used to amplify the desired transcript.


In a preferred embodiment of this invention, the upper strand or lower strand primer may be also biotinylated or labeled at the 5′ end with one of a) free amino group, b) thiol, c) carboxylic acid and d) another group not found in DNA that can react to form a strong bond to a known partner as an insoluble medium. These can then be used to immobilize the labeled strand after amplification. The immobilized DNA can be either single or double-stranded.


After amplification (using e.g., RT CapExtension or RACE), the DNAs of this invention are rendered single-stranded. For example, the strands can be separated by using a biotinylated primer, capturing the biotinylated product on streptavidin beads, denaturing the DNA, and washing away the complementary strand. Depending on which end of the captured DNA is wanted, one will choose to immobilize either the upper (sense) strand or the lower (antisense) strand.


To prepare the single-stranded amplified DNAs for cloning into genetic packages so as to effect display of, or for expression of, the peptides, polypeptides or proteins encoded, at least in part, by those DNAs, they must be manipulated to provide ends suitable for cloning and display and/or expression. In particular, any 5′ untranslated regions and mammalian signal sequences must be removed and replaced, in frame, by a suitable signal sequence that functions in the display or expression host. Additionally, parts of the variable domains (in antibody genes) may be removed and replaced by synthetic segments containing synthetic diversity. The diversity of other gene families may likewise be expanded with synthetic diversity.


According to the methods of this invention, there are two ways to manipulate the single-stranded DNAs for display and/or expression. The first method comprises the steps of:

    • (i) contacting the nucleic acid with a single-stranded oligonucleotide, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid in the region in which cleavage is desired and including a sequence that with its complement in the nucleic acid forms a restriction endonuclease recognition site that on restriction results in cleavage of the nucleic acid at the desired location; and
    • (ii) cleaving the nucleic acid solely at the recognition site formed by the complementation of the nucleic acid and the oligonucleotide;


      the contacting and the cleaving steps being performed at a temperature sufficient to maintain the nucleic acid in substantially single-stranded form, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location, and the cleavage being carried out using a restriction endonuclease that is active at the chosen temperature.


In this first method, short oligonucleotides are annealed to the single-stranded DNA so that restriction endonuclease recognition sites formed within the now locally double-stranded regions of the DNA can be cleaved. In particular, a recognition site that occurs at the same position in a substantial fraction of the single-stranded DNAs is identical.


For antibody genes, this can be done using a catalog of germline sequences. See, e.g., “www.mrc-cpe.cam.ac.uk/imt-doc/restricted/ok.html.” Updates can be obtained from this site under the heading “Amino acid and nucleotide sequence alignments.” For other families, similar comparisons exist and may be used to select appropriate regions for cleavage and to maintain diversity.


For example, Table 1 depicts the DNA sequences of the FR3 regions of the 51 known human VH germline genes. In this region, the genes contain restriction endonuclease recognition sites shown in Table 2. Restriction endonucleases that cleave a large fraction of germline genes at the same site are preferred over endonucleases that cut at a variety of sites. Furthermore, it is preferred that there be only one site for the restriction endonucleases within the region to which the short oligonucleotide binds on the single-stranded DNA, e.g., about 10 bases on either side of the restriction endonuclease recognition site.


An enzyme that cleaves downstream in FR3 is also more preferable because it captures fewer mutations in the framework. This may be advantageous is some cases. However, it is well known that framework mutations exist and confer and enhance antibody binding. The present invention, by choice of appropriate restriction site, allows all or part of FR3 diversity to be captured. Hence, the method also allows extensive diversity to be captured.


Finally, in the methods of this invention restriction endonucleases that are active between about 37° C. and about 75° C. are used. Preferably, restriction endonucleases that are active between about 45° C. and about 75 C may be used. More preferably, enzymes that are active above 50° C., and most preferably active about 55° C., are used. Such temperatures maintain the nucleic acid sequence to be cleaved in substantially single-stranded form.


Enzymes shown in Table 2 that cut many of the heavy chain FR3 germline genes at a single position include: MaeIII(24@4), Tsp45I(21@4), HphI(44@5), BsaJI(23@65), AluI(23@47), BlpI(21@48), DdeI(29@58), BglII(10@61), MslI(44@72), BsiEI(23@74), EaeI(23@74), EagI(23@74), HaeIII(25@75), Bst4CI(51@86), HpyCH4III(51@86), HinfI(38@2), MlyI(18@2), PleI(18@2), MnlI(31@67), HpyCH4V(21@44), BsmAI(16@11), BpmI(19@12), XmnI(12@30), and SacI(11@51). (The notation used means, for example, that BsmAI cuts 16 of the FR3 germline genes with a restriction endonuclease recognition site beginning at base 11 of FR3.) For cleavage of human heavy chains in FR3, the preferred restriction endonucleases are: Bst4CI (or TaaI or HpyCH4III), BlpI, HpyCH4V, and MslI. Because ACNGT (the restriction endonuclease recognition site for Bst4CI, TaaI, and HpyCH4III) is found at a consistent site in all the human FR3 germline genes, one of those enzymes is the most preferred for capture of heavy chain CDR3 diversity. BlpI and HpyCH4V are complementary. BlpI cuts most members of the VH1 and VH4 families while HpyCH4V cuts most members of the VH3, VH5, VH6, and VH7 families. Neither enzyme cuts VH2s, but this is a very small family, containing only three members. Thus, these enzymes may also be used in preferred embodiments of the methods of this invention.


The restriction endonucleases HpyCH4III, Bst4CI, and TaaI all recognize 5′-ACnGT-3′ and cut upper strand DNA after n and lower strand DNA before the base complementary to n. This is the most preferred restriction endonuclease recognition site for this method on human heavy chains because it is found in all germline genes. Furthermore, the restriction endonuclease recognition region (ACnGT) matches the second and third bases of a tyrosine codon (tay) and the following cysteine codon (tgy) as shown in Table 3. These codons are highly conserved, especially the cysteine in mature antibody genes.


Table 4 E shows the distinct oligonucleotides of length 22 (except the last one which is of length 20) bases. Table 5 C shows the analysis of 1617 actual heavy chain antibody genes. Of these, 1511 have the site and match one of the candidate oligonucleotides to within 4 mismatches. Eight oligonucleotides account for most of the matches and are given in Table 4 F.1. The 8 oligonucleotides are very similar so that it is likely that satisfactory cleavage will be achieved with only one oligonucleotide (such as H43.77.97.1-02#1) by adjusting temperature, pH, salinity, and the like. One or two oligonucleotides may likewise suffice whenever the germline gene sequences differ very little and especially if they differ very little close to the restriction endonuclease recognition region to be cleaved. Table 5 D shows a repeat analysis of 1617 actual heavy chain antibody genes using only the 8 chosen oligonucleotides. This shows that 1463 of the sequences match at least one of the oligonucleotides to within 4 mismatches and have the site as expected. Only 7 sequences have a second HpyCH4III restriction endonuclease recognition region in this region.


Another illustration of choosing an appropriate restriction endonuclease recognition site involves cleavage in FR1 of human heavy chains. Cleavage in FR1 allows capture of the entire CDR diversity of the heavy chain.


The germline genes for human heavy chain FR1 are shown in Table 6. Table 7 shows the restriction endonuclease recognition sites found in human germline genes FR1s. The preferred sites are BsgI(GTGCAG;39@4), BsoFI(GCngc;43@6,11@9,2@3,1@12), TseI(Gcwgc;43@6,11@9,2@3,1@12), MspAiI(CMGckg;46@7,2@1), PvuII(CAGctg;46@7,2@1), AluI(AGct;48@82@2), DdeI(Ctnag;22@52,9@48), HphI (tcacc;22@80), BssKI(Nccngg;35@39,2@40), BsaJI(Ccnngg;32@40,2@41), BstNI(CCwgg;33@40), ScrFI(CCngg;35@40,2@41), EcoOl09I(RGgnccy;22@46, 11@43), Sau96I(Ggncc;23@47,11@44), AvaII(Ggwcc;23@47,4@44), PpuMI(RGgwccy;22@46,4@43), BsmFI(gtccc;20@48), HinfI(Gantc;34@16,21@56,21@77), TfiI(21@77), MlyI(GAGTC;34@16), MlyI(gactc;21@56), and AlwNI(CAGnnnctg;22@68). The more preferred sites are MspAI and PvuII. MspAI and PvuII have 46 sites at 7-12 and 2 at 1-6. To avoid cleavage at both sites, oligonucleotides are used that do not fully cover the site at 1-6. Thus, the DNA will not be cleaved at that site. We have shown that DNA that extends 3, 4, or 5 bases beyond a PvuII-site can be cleaved efficiently.


Another illustration of choosing an appropriate restriction endonuclease recognition site involves cleavage in FR1 of human kappa light chains. Table 8 shows the human kappa FR1 germline genes and Table 9 shows restriction endonuclease recognition sites that are found in a substantial number of human kappa FR1 germline genes at consistent locations. Of the restriction endonuclease recognition sites listed, BsmAI and PflFI are the most preferred enzymes. BsmAI sites are found at base 18 in 35 of 40 germline genes. PflFI sites are found in 35 of 40 germline genes at base 12.


Another example of choosing an appropriate restriction endonuclease recognition site involves cleavage in FR1 of the human lambda light chain. Table 10 shows the 31 known human lambda FR1 germline gene sequences. Table 11 shows restriction endonuclease recognition sites found in human lambda FR1 germline genes. HinfI and DdeI are the most preferred restriction endonucleases for cutting human lambda chains in FR1.


After the appropriate site or sites for cleavage are chosen, one or more short oligonucleotides are prepared so as to functionally complement, alone or in combination, the chosen recognition site. The oligonucleotides also include sequences that flank the recognition site in the majority of the amplified genes. This flanking region allows the sequence to anneal to the single-stranded DNA sufficiently to allow cleavage by the restriction endonuclease specific for the site chosen.


The actual length and sequence of the oligonucleotide depends on the recognition site and the conditions to be used for contacting and cleavage. The length must be sufficient so that the oligonucleotide is functionally complementary to the single-stranded DNA over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location.


Typically, the oligonucleotides of this preferred method of the invention are about 17 to about 30 nucleotides in length. Below about 17 bases, annealing is too weak and above 30 bases there can be a loss of specificity. A preferred length is 18 to 24 bases.


Oligonucleotides of this length need not be identical complements of the germline genes. Rather, a few mismatches taken may be tolerated. Preferably, however, no more than 1-3 mismatches are allowed. Such mismatches do not adversely affect annealing of the oligonucleotide to the single-stranded DNA. Hence, the two DNAs are said to be functionally complementary.


The second method to manipulate the single-stranded DNAs of this invention for display and/or expression comprises the steps of:

    • (i) contacting the nucleic acid with a partially double-stranded oligonucleotide, the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid in the region in which cleavage is desired, and the double-stranded region of the oligonucleotide having a restriction endonuclease recognition site; and
    • (ii) cleaving the nucleic acid solely at the cleavage site formed by the complementation of the nucleic acid and the single-stranded region of the oligonucleotide;


      the contacting and the cleaving steps being performed at a temperature sufficient to maintain the nucleic acid in substantially single-stranded form, the oligonucleotide being functionally complementary to the nucleic acid over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location, and the cleavage being carried out using a restriction endonuclease that is active at the chosen temperature.


As explained above, the cleavage site may be formed by the single-stranded portion of the partially double-stranded oligonucleotide duplexing with the single-stranded DNA, the cleavage site may be carried in the double-stranded portion of the partially double-stranded oligonucleotide, or the cleavage site may be introduced by the amplification primer used to amplify the single-stranded DNA-partially double-stranded oligonucleotide combination. In this embodiment, the first is preferred. And, the restriction endonuclease recognition site may be located in either the double-stranded portion of the oligonucleotide or introduced by the amplification primer, which is complementary to that double-stranded region, as used to amplify the combination.


Preferably, the restriction endonuclease site is that of a Type II-S restriction endonuclease, whose cleavage site is located at a known distance from its recognition site.


This second method, preferably, employs Universal Restriction Endonucleases (“URE”). UREs are partially double-stranded oligonucleotides. The single-stranded portion or overlap of the URE consists of a DNA adapter that is functionally complementary to the sequence to be cleaved in the single-stranded DNA. The double-stranded portion consists of a restriction endonuclease recognition site, preferably type II-S.


The URE method of this invention is specific and precise and can tolerate some (e.g., 1-3) mismatches in the complementary regions, i.e., it is functionally complementary to that region. Further, conditions under which the URE is used can be adjusted so that most of the genes that are amplified can be cut, reducing bias in the library produced from those genes.


The sequence of the single-stranded DNA adapter or overlap portion of the URE typically consists of about 14-22 bases. However, longer or shorter adapters may be used. The size depends on the ability of the adapter to associate with its functional complement in the single-stranded DNA and the temperature used for contacting the URE and the single-stranded DNA at the temperature used for cleaving the DNA with the restriction enzyme. The adapter must be functionally complementary to the single-stranded DNA over a large enough region to allow the two strands to associate such that the cleavage may occur at the chosen temperature and at the desired location. We prefer singe-stranded or overlap portions of 14-17 bases in length, and more preferably 18-20 bases in length.


The site chosen for cleavage using the URE is preferably one that is substantially conserved in the family of amplified DNAs. As compared to the first cleavage method of this invention, these sites do not need to be endonuclease recognition sites. However, like the first method, the sites chosen can be synthetic rather than existing in the native DNA. Such sites may be chosen by references to the sequences of known antibodies or other families of genes. For example, the sequences of many germline genes are reported at www.mrc-cpe.cam.ac.uk/imt-doc/restricted/ok.html. For example, one preferred site occurs near the end of FR3—codon 89 through the second base of codon 93. CDR3 begins at codon 95.


The sequences of 79 human heavy-chain genes are also available at www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entre2/nucleotide.html. This site can be used to identify appropriate sequences for URE cleavage according to the methods of this invention. See, e.g., Table 12B.


Most preferably, one or more sequences are identified using these sites or other available sequence information. These sequences together are present in a substantial fraction of the amplified DNAs. For example, multiple sequences could be used to allow for known diversity in germline genes or for frequent somatic mutations. Synthetic degenerate sequences could also be used. Preferably, a sequence(s) that occurs in at least 65% of genes examined with no more than 2-3 mismatches is chosen


URE single-stranded adapters or overlaps are then made to be complementary to the chosen regions. Conditions for using the UREs are determined empirically. These conditions should allow cleavage of DNA that contains the functionally complementary sequences with no more than 2 or 3 mismatches but that do not allow cleavage of DNA lacking such sequences.


As described above, the double-stranded portion of the URE includes an endonuclease recognition site, preferably a Type II-S recognition site. Any enzyme that is active at a temperature necessary to maintain the single-stranded DNA substantially in that form and to allow the single-stranded DNA adapter portion of the URE to anneal long enough to the single-stranded DNA to permit cleavage at the desired site may be used.


The preferred Type II-S enzymes for use in the URE methods of this invention provide asymmetrical cleavage of the single-stranded DNA. Among these are the enzymes listed in Table 13. The most preferred Type II-S enzyme is FokI.


When the preferred FokI containing URE is used, several conditions are preferably used to effect cleavage:

    • 1) Excess of the URE over target DNA should be present to activate the enzyme. URE present only in equimolar amounts to the target DNA would yield poor cleavage of ssDNA because the amount of active enzyme available would be limiting.
    • 2) An activator may be used to activate part of the FokI enzyme to dimerize without causing cleavage. Examples of appropriate activators are shown in Table 14.
    • 3) The cleavage reaction is performed at a temperature between 45°-75° C., preferably above 50° C. and most preferably above 55° C.


The UREs used in the prior art contained a 14-base single-stranded segment, a 10-base stem (containing a FokI site), followed by the palindrome of the 10-base stem. While such UREs may be used in the methods of this invention, the preferred UREs of this invention also include a segment of three to eight bases (a loop) between the FokI restriction endonuclease recognition site containing segments. In the preferred embodiment, the stem (containing the FokI site) and its palindrome are also longer than 10 bases. Preferably, they are 10-14 bases in length. Examples of these “lollipop” URE adapters are shown in Table 15.


One example of using a URE to cleave an single-stranded DNA involves the FR3 region of human heavy chain. Table 16 shows an analysis of 840 full-length mature human heavy chains with the URE recognition sequences shown. The vast majority (718/840=0.85) will be recognized with 2 or fewer mismatches using five UREs (VHS881-1.1, VHS881-1.2, VHS881-2.1, VHS881-4.1, and VHS881-9.1). Each has a 20-base adaptor sequence to complement the germline gene, a ten-base stem segment containing a FokI site, a five base loop, and the reverse complement of the first stem segment. Annealing those adapters, alone or in combination, to single-stranded antisense heavy chain DNA and treating with FokI in the presence of, e.g., the activator FOKIact, will lead to cleavage of the antisense strand at the position indicated.


Another example of using a URE(s) to cleave a single-stranded DNA involves the FR1 region of the human Kappa light chains. Table 17 shows an analysis of 182 full-length human kappa chains for matching by the four 19-base probe sequences shown. Ninety-six percent of the sequences match one of the probes with 2 or fewer mismatches. The URE adapters shown in Table 17 are for cleavage of the sense strand of kappa chains. Thus, the adaptor sequences are the reverse complement of the germline gene sequences. The URE consists of a ten-base stem, a five base loop, the reverse complement of the stem and the complementation sequence. The loop shown here is TTGTT, but other sequences could be used. Its function is to interrupt the palindrome of the stems so that formation of a lollypop monomer is favored over dimerization. Table 17 also shows where the sense strand is cleaved.


Another example of using a URE to cleave a single-stranded DNA involves the human lambda light chain. Table 18 shows analysis of 128 human lambda light chains for matching the four 19-base probes shown. With three or fewer mismatches, 88 of 128 (69%) of the chains match one of the probes. Table 18 also shows URE adapters corresponding to these probes. Annealing these adapters to upper-strand ssDNA of lambda chains and treatment with FokI in the presence of FOKIact at a temperature at or above 45° C. will lead to specific and precise cleavage of the chains.


The conditions under which the short oligonucleotide sequences of the first method and the UREs of the second method are contacted with the single-stranded DNAs may be empirically determined. The conditions must be such that the single-stranded DNA remains in substantially single-stranded form. More particularly, the conditions must be such that the single-stranded DNA does not form loops that may interfere with its association with the oligonucleotide sequence or the URE or that may themselves provide sites for cleavage by the chosen restriction endonuclease.


The effectiveness and specificity of short oligonucleotides (first method) and UREs (second method) can be adjusted by controlling the concentrations of the URE adapters/oligonucleotides and substrate DNA, the temperature, the pH, the concentration of metal ions, the ionic strength, the concentration of chaotropes (such as urea and formamide), the concentration of the restriction endonuclease(e.g., FokI), and the time of the digestion. These conditions can be optimized with synthetic oligonucleotides having: 1) target germline gene sequences, 2) mutated target gene sequences, or 3) somewhat related non-target sequences. The goal is to cleave most of the target sequences and minimal amounts of non-targets.


In accordance with this invention, the single-stranded DNA is maintained in substantially that form using a temperature between about 37° C. and about 75° C. Preferably, a temperature between about 45° C. and about 75° C. is used. More preferably, a temperature between 50° C. and 60° C., most preferably between 55° C. and 60° C., is used. These temperatures are employed both when contacting the DNA with the oligonucleotide or URE and when cleaving the DNA using the methods of this invention.


The two cleavage methods of this invention have several advantages. The first method allows the individual members of the family of single-stranded DNAs to be cleaved preferentially at one substantially conserved endonuclease recognition site. The method also does not require an endonuclease recognition site to be built into the reverse transcription or amplification primers. Any native or synthetic site in the family can be used.


The second method has both of these advantages. In addition, the preferred URE method allows the single-stranded DNAs to be cleaved at positions where no endonuclease recognition site naturally occurs or has been synthetically constructed.


Most importantly, both cleavage methods permit the use of 5′ and 3′ primers so as to maximize diversity and then cleavage to remove unwanted or deleterious sequences before cloning, display and/or expression.


After cleavage of the amplified DNAs using one of the methods of this invention, the DNA is prepared for cloning, display and/or expression. This is done by using a partially duplexed synthetic DNA adapter, whose terminal sequence is based on the specific cleavage site at which the amplified DNA has been cleaved.


The synthetic DNA is designed such that when it is ligated to the cleaved single-stranded DNA in proper reading frame so that the desired peptide, polypeptide or protein can be displayed on the surface of the genetic package and/or expressed. Preferably, the double-stranded portion of the adapter comprises the sequence of several codons that encode the amino acid sequence characteristic of the family of peptides, polypeptides or proteins up to the cleavage site. For human heavy chains, the amino acids of the 3-23 framework are preferably used to provide the sequences required for expression of the cleaved DNA.


Preferably, the double-stranded portion of the adapter is about 12 to 100 bases in length. More preferably, about 20 to 100 bases are used. The double-standard region of the adapter also preferably contains at least one endonuclease recognition site useful for cloning the DNA into a suitable display and/or expression vector (or a recipient vector used to archive the diversity). This endonuclease restriction site may be native to the germline gene sequences used to extend the DNA sequence. It may be also constructed using degenerate sequences to the native germline gene sequences. Or, it may be wholly synthetic.


The single-stranded portion of the adapter is complementary to the region of the cleavage in the single-stranded DNA. The overlap can be from about 2 bases up to about 15 bases. The longer the overlap, the more efficient the ligation is likely to be. A preferred length for the overlap is 7 to 10. This allows some mismatches in the region so that diversity in this region may be captured.


The single-stranded region or overlap of the partially duplexed adapter is advantageous because it allows DNA cleaved at the chosen site, but not other fragments to be captured. Such fragments would contaminate the library with genes encoding sequences that will not fold into proper antibodies and are likely to be non-specifically sticky.


One illustration of the use of a partially duplexed adaptor in the methods of this invention involves ligating such adaptor to a human FR3 region that has been cleaved, as described above, at 5′-ACnGT-3′ using HpyCH4III, Bst4CI or TaaI.


Table 4 F.2 shows the bottom strand of the double-stranded portion of the adaptor for ligation to the cleaved bottom-strand DNA. Since the HpyCH4III-Site is so far to the right (as shown in Table 3), a sequence that includes the AflII-site as well as the XbaI site can be added. This bottom strand portion of the partially-duplexed adaptor, H43.XAExt, incorporates both XbaI and AflII-sites. The top strand of the double-stranded portion of the adaptor has neither site (due to planned mismatches in the segments opposite the XbaI and AflII-Sites of H43.XAExt), but will anneal very tightly to H43.XAExt. H43AExt contains only the AflII-site and is to be used with the top strands H43.ABr1 and H43.ABr2 (which have intentional alterations to destroy the AflII-site).


After ligation, the desired, captured DNA can be PCR amplified again, if desired, using in the preferred embodiment a primer to the downstream constant region of the antibody gene and a primer to part of the double-standard region of the adapter. The primers may also carry restriction endonuclease sites for use in cloning the amplified DNA.


After ligation, and perhaps amplification, of the partially double-stranded adapter to the single-stranded amplified DNA, the composite DNA is cleaved at chosen 5′ and 3′ endonuclease recognition sites.


The cleavage sites useful for cloning depend on the phage or phagemid or other vectors into which the cassette will be inserted and the available sites in the antibody genes. Table 19 provides restriction endonuclease data for 75 human light chains. Table 20 shows corresponding data for 79 human heavy chains. In each Table, the endonucleases are ordered by increasing frequency of cutting. In these Tables, Nch is the number of chains cut by the enzyme and Ns is the number of sites (some chains have more than one site).


From this analysis, SfiI, NotI, AflII, ApaLI, and AscI are very suitable. SfiI and NotI are preferably used in pCES1 to insert the heavy-chain display segment. ApaLI and AscI are preferably used in pCES1 to insert the light-chain display segment.


BstEII-sites occur in 97% of germ-line JH genes. In rearranged V genes, only 54/79 (68%) of heavy-chain genes contain a BstEII-Site and 7/61 of these contain two sites. Thus, 47/79 (59%) contain a single BstEII-Site. An alternative to using BstEII is to cleave via UREs at the end of JH and ligate to a synthetic oligonucleotide that encodes part of CH1.


One example of preparing a family of DNA sequences using the methods of this invention involves capturing human CDR 3 diversity. As described above, mRNAs from various autoimmune patients are reverse transcribed into lower strand cDNA. After the top strand RNA is degraded, the lower strand is immobilized and a short oligonucleotide used to cleave the cDNA upstream of CDR3. A partially duplexed synthetic DNA adapter is then annealed to the DNA and the DNA is amplified using a primer to the adapter and a primer to the constant region (after FR4). The DNA is then cleaved using BstEII (in FR4) and a restriction endonuclease appropriate to the partially double-stranded adapter (e.g., XbaI and AflII (in FR3)). The DNA is then ligated into a synthetic VH skeleton such as 3-23.


One example of preparing a single-stranded DNA that was cleaved using the URE method involves the human Kappa chain. The cleavage site in the sense strand of this chain is depicted in Table 17. The oligonucleotide kapextURE is annealed to the oligonucleotides (kaBR01UR, kaBR02UR, kaBR03UR, and kaBR04UR) to form a partially duplex DNA. This DNA is then ligated to the cleaved soluble kappa chains. The ligation product is then amplified using primers kapextUREPCR and CKForeAsc (which inserts a AscI site after the end of C kappa). This product is then cleaved with ApaLI and AscI and ligated to similarly cut recipient vector.


Another example involves the cleavage of lambda light chains, illustrated in Table 18. After cleavage, an extender (ON_LamEx133) and four bridge oligonucleotides (ON_LamB1-133, ON_LamB2-133, ON_LamB3-133, and ON_LamB4-133) are annealed to form a partially duplex DNA. That DNA is ligated to the cleaved lambda-chain sense strands. After ligation, the DNA is amplified with ON_Laml33PCR and a forward primer specific to the lambda constant domain, such as CL2ForeAsc or CL7ForeAsc (Table 130).


In human heavy chains, one can cleave almost all genes in FR4 (downstream, i.e., toward the 3′ end of the sense strand, of CDR3) at a BstEII-Site that occurs at a constant position in a very large fraction of human heavy-chain V genes. One then needs a site in FR3, if only CDR3 diversity is to be captured, in FR2, if CDR2 and CDR3 diversity is wanted, or in FR1, if all the CDR diversity is wanted. These sites are preferably inserted as part of the partially double-stranded adaptor.


The preferred process of this invention is to provide recipient vectors (e.g., for display and/or expression) having sites that allow cloning of either light or heavy chains. Such vectors are well known and widely used in the art. A preferred phage display vector in accordance with this invention is phage MALIA3. This displays in gene III. The sequence of the phage MALIA3 is shown in Table 21A (annotated) and Table 21B (condensed).


The DNA encoding the selected regions of the light or heavy chains can be transferred to the vectors using endonucleases that cut either light or heavy chains only very rarely. For example, light chains may be captured with ApaLI and AscI. Heavy-chain genes are preferably cloned into a recipient vector having SfiI, NcoI, XbaI, AflII, BstEII, ApaI, and NotI sites. The light chains are preferably moved into the library as


ApaLI-AscI fragments. The heavy chains are preferably moved into the library as SfiI-NotI fragments. Most preferably, the display is had on the surface of a derivative of M13 phage. The most preferred vector contains all the genes of M13, an antibiotic resistance gene, and the display cassette. The preferred vector is provided with restriction sites that allow introduction and excision of members of the diverse family of genes, as cassettes. The preferred vector is stable against rearrangement under the growth conditions used to amplify phage.


In another embodiment of this invention, the diversity captured by the methods of the present invention may be displayed and/or expressed in a phagemid vector (e.g., pCES1) that displays and/or expresses the peptide, polypeptide or protein. Such vectors may also be used to store the diversity for subsequent display and/or expression using other vectors or phage.


In another embodiment of this invention, the diversity captured by the methods of the present invention may be displayed and/or expressed in a yeast vector.


In another embodiment, the mode of display may be through a short linker to anchor domains—one possible anchor comprising the final portion of M13 III (“IIIstump”) and a second possible anchor being the full length III mature protein.


The IIIstump fragment contains enough of M13 III to assemble into phage but not the domains involved in mediating infectivity. Because the w.t. III proteins are present the phage is unlikely to delete the antibody genes and phage that do delete these segments receive only a very small growth advantage. For each of the anchor domains, the DNA encodes the w.t. AA sequence, but differs from the w.t. DNA sequence to a very high extent. This will greatly reduce the potential for homologous recombination between the anchor and the w.t. gene that is also present (see Example 6).


Most preferably, the present invention uses a complete phage carrying an antibiotic-resistance gene (such as an ampicillin-resistance gene) and the display cassette. Because the w.t. iii and possibly viii genes are present, the w.t. proteins are also present. The display cassette is transcribed from a regulatable promoter (e.g., PLacZ). Use of a regulatable promoter allows control of the ratio of the fusion display gene to the corresponding w.t. coat protein. This ratio determines the average number of copies of the display fusion per phage (or phagemid) particle.


Another aspect of the invention is a method of displaying peptides, polypeptides or proteins (and particularly Fabs) on filamentous phage. In the most preferred embodiment this method displays FABs and comprises:

  • a) obtaining a cassette capturing a diversity of segments of DNA encoding the elements:


    Preg::RBS1::SS1::VL::CL::stop::RBS2::SS2::VH::CH1::linker::anchor::stop::,


    where Preg is a regulatable promoter, RBS1 is a first ribosome binding site, SS1 is a signal sequence operable in the host strain, VL is a member of a diverse set of light-chain variable regions, CL is a light-chain constant region, stop is one or more stop codons, RBS2 is a second ribosome binding site, SS2 is a second signal sequence operable in the host strain, VH is a member of a diverse set of heavy-chain variable regions, CH1 is an antibody heavy-chain first constant domain, linker is a sequence of amino acids of one to about 50 residues, anchor is a protein that will assemble into the filamentous phage particle and stop is a second example of one or more stop codons; and
  • b) positioning that cassette within the phage genome to maximize the viability of the phage and to minimize the potential for deletion of the cassette or parts thereof.


The DNA encoding the anchor protein in the above preferred cassette should be designed to encode the same (or a closely related) amino acid sequence as is found in one of the coat proteins of the phage, but with a distinct DNA sequence. This is to prevent unwanted homologous recombination with the w.t. gene. In addition, the cassette should be placed in the intergenic region. The positioning and orientation of the display cassette can influence the behavior of the phage.


In one embodiment of the invention, a transcription terminator may be placed after the second stop of the display cassette above (e.g., Trp). This will reduce interaction between the display cassette and other genes in the phage antibody display vector.


In another embodiment of the methods of this invention, the phage or phagemid can display and/or express proteins other than Fab, by replacing the Fab portions indicated above, with other protein genes.


Various hosts can be used the display and/or expression aspect of this invention. Such hosts are well known in the art. In the preferred embodiment, where Fabs are being displayed and/or expressed, the preferred host should grow at 30° C. and be RecA (to reduce unwanted genetic recombination) and EndA (to make recovery of RF DNA easier). It is also preferred that the host strain be easily transformed by electroporation.


XL1-Blue MRF′ satisfies most of these preferences, but does not grow well at 30° C. XL1-Blue MRF′ does grow slowly at 38° C. and thus is an acceptable host. TG-1 is also an acceptable host although it is RecA+ and EndA+. XL1-Blue MRF′ is more preferred for the intermediate host used to accumulate diversity prior to final construction of the library.


After display and/or expression, the libraries of this invention may be screened using well known and conventionally used techniques. The selected peptides, polypeptides or proteins may then be used to treat disease. Generally, the peptides, polypeptides or proteins for use in therapy or in pharmaceutical compositions are produced by isolating the DNA encoding the desired peptide, polypeptide or protein from the member of the library selected. That DNA is then used in conventional methods to produce the peptide, polypeptides or protein it encodes in appropriate host cells, preferably mammalian host cells, e.g., CHO cells. After isolation, the peptide, polypeptide or protein is used alone or with pharmaceutically acceptable compositions in therapy to treat disease.


EXAMPLES
Example 1: RACE Amplification of Heavy and Light Chain Antibody Repertoires from Autoimmune Patients

Total RNA was isolated from individual blood samples (50 ml) of 11 patients using a RNAzol™ kit (CINNA/Biotecx), as described by the manufacturer. The patients were diagnosed as follows:


1. SLE and phospholipid syndrome


2. limited systemic sclerosis


3. SLE and Sjogren syndrome


4. Limited Systemic sclerosis


5. Reumatoid Arthritis with active vasculitis


6. Limited systemic sclerosis and Sjogren Syndrome


7. Reumatoid Artritis and (not active) vasculitis


8. SLE and Sjogren syndrome


9. SLE

10. SLE and (active) glomerulonephritis


11. Polyarthritis/Raynauds Phenomen

From these 11 samples of total RNA, Poly-A+ RNA was isolated using Promega PolyATtract® mRNA Isolation kit (Promega).


250 ng of each poly-A+ RNA sample was used to amplify antibody heavy and light chains with the GeneRAacer™ kit (Invitrogen cat no. L1500-01). A schematic overview of the RACE procedure is shown in FIG. 3.


Using the general protocol of the GeneRAacer kit, an RNA adaptor was ligated to the 5′end of all mRNAs. Next, a reverse transcriptase reaction was performed in the presence of oligo(dT15) specific primer under conditions described by the manufacturer in the GeneRAacer kit.


1/5 of the cDNA from the reverse transcriptase reaction was used in a 20 ul PCR reaction. For amplification of the heavy chain IgM repertoire, a forward primer based on the CH1 chain of IgM [HuCmFOR] and a backward primer based on the ligated synthetic adaptor sequence [5′A] were used. (See Table 22)


For amplification of the kappa and lambda light chains, a forward primer that contains the 3′ coding-end of the cDNA [HuCkFor and HuCLFor2+HuCLfor7] and a backward primer based on the ligated synthetic adapter sequence [5′A] was used (See Table 22). Specific amplification products after 30 cycles of primary PCR were obtained.



FIG. 4 shows the amplification products obtained after the primary PCR reaction from 4 different patient samples. 8 ul primary PCR product from 4 different patients was analyzed on a agarose gel [labeled 1,2, 3 and 4]. For the heavy chain, a product of approximately 950 nt is obtained while for the kappa and lambda light chains the product is approximately 850 nt. M1-2 are molecular weight markers.


PCR products were also analyzed by DNA sequencing [10 clones from the lambda, kappa or heavy chain repertoires]. All sequenced antibody genes recovered contained the full coding sequence as well as the 5′ leader sequence and the V gene diversity was the expected diversity (compared to literature data).


50 ng of all samples from all 11 individual amplified samples were mixed for heavy, lambda light or kappa light chains and used in secondary PCR reactions.


In all secondary PCRs approximately 1 ng template DNA from the primary PCR mixture was used in multiple 50 ul PCR reactions [25 cycles].


For the heavy chain, a nested biotinylated forward primer [HuCm-Nested] was used, and a nested 5′end backward primer located in the synthetic adapter-sequence [5′NA] was used. The 5′end lower-strand of the heavy chain was biotinylated.


For the light chains, a 5′end biotinylated nested primer in the synthetic adapter was used [5′NA] in combination with a 3′end primer in the constant region of Ckappa and Clambda, extended with a sequence coding for the AscI restriction site [kappa: HuCkForAscI, Lambda: HuCL2-FOR-ASC+HuCL7-FOR-ASC]. [5′end Top strand DNA was biotinylated]. After gel-analysis the secondary PCR products were pooled and purified with Promega Wizzard PCR cleanup.


Approximately 25 ug biotinylated heavy chain, lambda and kappa light chain DNA was isolated from the 11 patients.


Example 2: Capturing Kappa Chains with BsmAI

A repertoire of human-kappa chain mRNAs was prepared using the RACE method of Example 1 from a collection of patients having various autoimmune diseases.


This Example followed the protocol of Example 1. Approximately 2 micrograms (ug) of human kappa-chain (Igkappa) gene RACE material with biotin attached to 5′-end of upper strand was immobilized as in Example 1 on 200 microliters (μL) of Seradyn magnetic beads. The lower strand was removed by washing the DNA with 2 aliquots 200 μL of 0.1 M NaOH (pH 13) for 3 minutes for the first aliquot followed by 30 seconds for the second aliquot. The beads were neutralized with 200 μL of 10 mM Tris (pH 7.5) 100 mM NaCl. The short oligonucleotides shown in Table 23 were added in 40 fold molar excess in 100 μL of NEB buffer 2 (50 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol pH 7.9) to the dry beads. The mixture was incubated at 95° C. for 5 minutes then cooled down to 55° C. over 30 minutes. Excess oligonucleotide was washed away with 2 washes of NEB buffer 3 (100 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol pH 7.9). Ten units of BsmAI (NEB) were added in NEB buffer 3 and incubated for 1 h at 55° C. The cleaved downstream DNA was collected and purified over a Qiagen PCR purification column (FIGS. 5 and 6).



FIG. 5 shows an analysis of digested kappa single-stranded DNA. Approximately 151.5 pmol of adapter was annealed to 3.79 pmol of immobilized kappa single-stranded DNA followed by digestion with 15 U of BsmAI. The supernatant containing the desired DNA was removed and analyzed by 5% polyacrylamide gel along with the remaining beads which contained uncleaved full length kappa DNA. 189 pmol of cleaved single-stranded DNA was purified for further analysis. Five percent of the original full length ssDNA remained on the beads.



FIG. 6 shows an analysis of the extender-cleaved kappa ligation. 180 pmol of pre-annealed bridge/extender was ligated to 1.8 pmol of BsmAI digested single-stranded DNA. The ligated DNA was purified by Qiagen PCR purification column and analyzed on a 5% polyacrylamide gel. Results indicated that the ligation of extender to single-stranded DNA was 95% efficient.


A partially double-stranded adaptor was prepared using the oligonucleotide shown in Table 23. The adaptor was added to the single-stranded DNA in 100 fold molar excess along with 1000 units of T4 DNA ligase and incubated overnight at 16° C. The excess oligonucleotide was removed with a Qiagen PCR purification column. The ligated material was amplified by PCR using the primers kapPCRt1 and kapfor shown in Table 23 for 10 cycles with the program shown in Table 24.


The soluble PCR product was run on a gel and showed a band of approximately 700 n, as expected (FIGS. 7 and 8). The DNA was cleaved with enzymes ApaLI and AscI, gel purified, and ligated to similarly cleaved vector pCES1.



FIG. 7 shows an analysis of the PCR product from the extender-kappa amplification. Ligated extender-kappa single-stranded DNA was amplified with primers specific to the extender and to the constant region of the light chain. Two different template concentrations, 10 ng versus 50 ng, were used as template and 13 cycles were used to generate approximately 1.5 ug of dsDNA as shown by 0.8% agarose gel analysis.



FIG. 8 shows an analysis of the purified PCR product from the extender-kappa amplification. Approximately 5 ug of PCR amplified extender-kappa double-stranded DNA was run out on a 0.8% agarose gel, cut out, and extracted with a GFX gel purification column. By gel analysis, 3.5 ug of double-stranded DNA was prepared.


The assay for capturing kappa chains with BsmA1 was repeated and produced similar results. FIG. 9A shows the DNA after it was cleaved and collected and purified over a Qiagen PCR purification column. FIG. 9B shows the partially double-stranded adaptor ligated to the single-stranded DNA. This ligated material was then amplified (FIG. 9C). The gel showed a band of approximately 700 n.


Table 25 shows the DNA sequence of a kappa light chain captured by this procedure. Table 26 shows a second sequence captured by this procedure. The closest bridge sequence was complementary to the sequence 5′-agccacc-3′, but the sequence captured reads 5′-Tgccacc-3′, showing that some mismatch in the overlapped region is tolerated.


Example 3: Construction of Synthetic CDR1 and CDR2 Diversity in V-3-23 VH Framework

Synthetic diversity in Complementary Determinant Region (CDR) 1 and 2 was created in the 3-23 VH framework in a two step process: first, a vector containing the 3-23 VH framework was constructed; and then, a synthetic CDR 1 and 2 was assembled and cloned into this vector.


For construction of the 3-23 VH framework, 8 oligonucleotides and two PCR primers (long oligonucleotides—TOPFR1A, BOTFR1B, BOTFR2, BOTFR3, F06, BOTFR4, ON-vgC1, and ON-vgC2 and primers—SFPRMET and BOTPCRPRIM, shown in Table 27) that overlap were designed based on the Genebank sequence of 3-23 VH framework region. The design incorporated at least one useful restriction site in each framework region, as shown in Table 27. In Table 27, the segments that were synthesized are shown as bold, the overlapping regions are underscored, and the PCR priming regions at each end are underscored.


A mixture of these 8 oligos was combined at a final concentration of 2.5 uM in a 20 ul PCR reaction. The PCR mixture contained 200 uM dNTPs, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 0.02U Pfu Turbo™ DNA Polymerase, 1U Qiagen HotStart Taq DNA Polymerase, and 1×Qiagen PCR buffer. The PCR program consisted of 10 cycles of 94_C for 30s, 55_C for 30s, and 72_C for 30s.


The assembled 3-23 VH DNA sequence was then amplified, using 2.5 ul of a 10-fold dilution from the initial PCR in 100 ul PCR reaction. The PCR reaction contained 200 uM dNTPs, 2.5 mM MgCl2, 0.02U Pfu Turbo™ DNA Polymerase, 1U Qiagen HotStart Taq DNA Polymerase, 1× Qiagen PCR Buffer and 2 outside primers (SFPRMET and BOTPCRPRIM) at a concentration of 1 uM. The PCR program consisted of 23 cycles at 94_C for 30s, 55_C for 30s, and 72_C for 60s. The 3-23 VH DNA sequence was digested and cloned into pCES1 (phagemid vector) using the SfiI and BstEII restriction endonuclease sites. All restriction enzymes mentioned herein were supplied by New England BioLabs, Beverly, Mass. and used as per the manufacturer's instructions.


Stuffer sequences (shown in Table 28 and Table 29) were introduced into pCES1 to replace CDR1/CDR2 sequences (900 bases between BspEI and XbaI RE sites) and CDR3 sequences (358 bases between AflII and BstEII) prior to cloning the CDR1/CDR2 diversity. This new vector was termed pCES5 and its sequence is given in Table 29.


Having stuffers in place of the CDRs avoids the risk that a parental sequence would be over-represented in the library. The stuffer sequences are fragments from the penicillase gene of E. coli. The CDR1-2 stuffer contains restriction sites for BglII, Bsu36I, BclI, XcmI, MluI, PvuII, HpaI, and HincII, the underscored sites being unique within the vector pCES5. The stuffer that replaces CDR3 contains the unique restriction endonuclease site RsrII.


A schematic representation of the design for CDR1 and CDR2 synthetic diversity is shown FIG. 10. The design was based on the presence of mutations in DP47/3-23 and related germline genes. Diversity was designed to be introduced at the positions within CDR1 and CDR2 indicated by the numbers in FIG. 10. The diversity at each position was chosen to be one of the three following schemes: 1=ADEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY; 2=YRWVGS; 3=PS, in which letters encode equimolar mixes of the indicated amino acids.


For the construction of the CDR1 and CDR2 diversity, 4 overlapping oligonucleotides (ON-vgC1, ON Br12, ON CD2Xba, and ON-vgC2, shown in Table 27 and Table 30) encoding CDR1/2, plus flanking regions, were designed. A mixture of these 4 oligos was combined at a final concentration of 2.5 uM in a 40 ul PCR reaction. Two of the 4 oligos contained variegated sequences positioned at the CDR1 and the CDR2. The PCR mixture contained 200 uM dNTPs, 2.5U Pwo DNA Polymerase (Roche), and 1× Pwo PCR buffer with 2 mM MgSO4. The PCR program consisted of 10 cycles at 94_C for 30s, 60_C for 30s, and 72_C for 60s. This assembled CDR1/2 DNA sequence was amplified, using 2.5 ul of the mixture in 100 ul PCR reaction. The PCR reaction contained 200 uM dNTPs, 2.5U Pwo DNA Polymerase, 1× Pwo PCR Buffer with 2 mM MgSO4 and 2 outside primers at a concentration of 1 uM. The PCR program consisted of 10 cycles at 94_C for 30s, 60_C for 30s, and 72_C for 60s. These variegated sequences were digested and cloned into the 3-23 VH framework in place of the CDR1/2 stuffer.


We obtained approximately 7×107 independent transformants. CDR3 diversity either from donor populations or from synthetic DNA can be cloned into the vector containing synthetic CDR1 and CDR 2 diversity.


A schematic representation of this procedure is shown in FIG. 11. A sequence encoding the FR-regions of the human V3-23 gene segment and CDR regions with synthetic diversity was made by oligonucleotide assembly and cloning via BspE1 and Xba1 sites into a vector that complements the FR1 and FR3 regions. Into this library of synthetic VH segments, the complementary VH-CDR3 sequence (top right) was cloned via Xbal an BstEll sites. The resulting cloned CH genes contain a combination of designed synthetic diversity and natural diversity (see FIG. 11).


Example 4: Cleavage and Ligation of the Lambda Light Chains with HinfI

A schematic of the cleavage and ligation of antibody light chains is shown in FIGS. 12A and 12B. Approximately 2 ug of biotinylated human Lambda DNA prepared as described in Example 1 was immobilized on 200 ul Seradyn magnetic beads. The lower strand was removed by incubation of the DNA with 200 ul of 0.1 M NaOH (pH=13) for 3 minutes, the supernatant was removed and an additional washing of 30 seconds with 200 ul of 0.1 M NaOH was performed. Supernatant was removed and the beads were neutralized with 200 ul of 10 mM Tris (pH=7.5), 100 mM NaCl. 2 additional washes with 200 ul NEB2 buffer 2, containing 10 mM Tris (pH=7.9), 50 mM NaCl, 10 mM MgCl2 and 1 mM dithiothreitol, were performed. After immobilization, the amount of ssDNA was estimated on a 5% PAGE-UREA gel.


About 0.8 ug ssDNA was recovered and incubated in 100 ul NEB2 buffer 2 containing 80 molar fold excess of an equimolar mix of ON_Lam1aB7, ON_Lam2aB7, ON_Lam31B7 and ON_Lam3rB7 [each oligo in 20 fold molar excess] (see Table 31).


The mixture was incubated at 950 C for 5 minutes and then slowly cooled down to 50° C. over a period of 30 minutes. Excess of oligonucleotide was washed away with 2 washes of 200 ul of NEB buffer 2.4 U/ug of Hinf I was added and incubated for 1 hour at 50° C. Beads were mixed every 10 minutes.


After incubation the sample was purified over a Qiagen PCR purification column and was subsequently analysed on a 5% PAGE-urea gel (see FIG. 13A, cleavage was more than 70% efficient).


A schematic of the ligation of the cleaved light chains is shown in FIG. 12B. A mix of bridge/extender pairs was prepared from the Brg/Ext oligo's listed in Table 31 (total molar excess 100 fold) in 1000 U of T4 DNA Ligase (NEB) and incubated overnight at 16° C. After ligation of the DNA, the excess oligonucleotide was removed with a Qiagen PCR purification column and ligation was checked on a Urea-PAGE gel (see FIG. 13B; ligation was more than 95% efficient).


Multiple PCRs were performed containing 10 ng of the ligated material in an 50 ul PCR reaction using 25 pMol ON lamPlePCR and 25 pmol of an equimolar mix of Hu-CL2AscI/HuCL7AscI primer (see Example 1).


PCR was performed at 60° C. for 15 cycles using Pfu polymerase. About 1 ug of dsDNA was recovered per PCR (see FIG. 13C) and cleaved with ApaL1 and AscI for cloning the lambda light chains in pCES2.


Example 5: Capture of Human Heavy-Chain CDR3 Population

A schematic of the cleavage and ligation of antibody light chains is shown in FIGS. 14A and 14B.


Approximately 3 ug of human heavy-chain (IgM) gene RACE material with biotin attached to 5′-end of lower strand was immobilized on 300 uL of Seradyn magnetic beads. The upper strand was removed by washing the DNA with 2 aliquots 300 uL of 0.1 M NaOH (pH 13) for 3 minutes for the first aliquot followed by 30 seconds for the second aliquot. The beads were neutralized with 300 uL of 10 mM Tris (pH 7.5) 100 mM NaCl. The REdaptors (oligonucleotides used to make single-stranded DNA locally double-stranded) shown in Table 32 were added in 30 fold molar excess in 200 uL of NEB buffer 4 (50 mM Potassium Acetate, 20 mM Tris-Acetate, 10 mM Magnesium Acetate, 1 mM dithiothreitol pH 7.9) to the dry beads. The REadaptors were incubated with the single-stranded DNA at 80° C. for 5 minutes then cooled down to 55° C. over 30 minutes. Excess REdaptors were washed away with 2 washes of NEB buffer 4. Fifteen units of HpyCH4III (NEB) were added in NEB buffer 4 and incubated for 1 hour at 55° C. The cleaved downstream DNA remaining on the beads was removed from the beads using a Qiagen Nucleotide removal column (see FIG. 15).


The Bridge/Extender pairs shown in Table 33 were added in 25 molar excess along with 1200 units of T4 DNA ligase and incubated overnight at 16° C. Excess Bridge/Extender was removed with a Qiagen PCR purification column. The ligated material was amplified by PCR using primers H43.XAExtPCR2 and Hucumnest shown in Table 34 for 10 cycles with the program shown in Table 35.


The soluble PCR product was run on a gel and showed a band of approximately 500 n, as expected (see FIG. 15B). The DNA was cleaved with enzymes SfiI and NotI, gel purified, and ligated to similarly cleaved vector PCES1.


Example 6: Description of Phage Display Vector CJRA05, a Member of the Library Built in Vector DY3F7

Table 36 contains an annotated DNA sequence of a member of the library, CJRA05, see FIG. 16. Table 36 is to be read as follows: on each line everything that follows an exclamation mark “!” is a comment. All occurrences of A, C, G, and T before “!” are the DNA sequence. Case is used only to show that certain bases constitute special features, such as restriction sites, ribosome binding sites, and the like, which are labeled below the DNA. CJRA05 is a derivative of phage DY3F7, obtained by cloning an ApaLI to NotI fragment into these sites in DY3F31. DY3F31 is like DY3F7 except that the light chain and heavy chain genes have been replaced by “stuffer” DNA that does not code for any antibody. DY3F7 contains an antibody that binds streptavidin, but did not come from the present library.


The phage genes start with gene ii and continue with genes x, v, vii, ix, viii, iii, vi, i, and iv. Gene iii has been slightly modified in that eight codons have been inserted between the signal sequence and the mature protein and the final amino acids of the signal sequence have been altered. This allows restriction enzyme recognition sites EagI and XbaI to be present. Following gene iv is the phage origin of replication (ori). After ori is bla which confers resistance to ampicillin (ApR). The phage genes and bla are transcribed in the same sense.


After bla, is the Fab cassette (illustrated in FIG. 17) comprising:

    • a) PlacZ promoter,
    • b) A first Ribosome Binding Site (RBS1),
    • c) The signal sequence form M13 iii,
    • d) An ApaLI RERS,
    • e) A light chain (a kappa L20::JK1 shortened by one codon at the V-J boundary in this case),
    • f) An AscI RERS,
    • g) A second Ribosome Binding Site (RBS2),
    • h) A signal sequence, preferably PelB, which contains,
    • i) An SfiI RERS,
    • j) A synthetic 3-23 V region with diversity in CDR1 and CDR2,
    • k) A captured CDR3,
    • l) A partially synthetic J region (FR4 after BstEII),
    • m) CH1,
    • n) A NotI RERS,
    • o) A His6 tag (SEQ ID NO: 12),
    • p) A cMyc tag,
    • q) An amber codon,
    • r) An anchor DNA that encodes the same amino-acid sequence as codons 273 to 424 of M13 iii (as shown in Table 37).
    • s) Two stop codons,
    • t) An AvrII RERS, and
    • u) A trp terminator.


The anchor (item r) encodes the same amino-acid sequence as do codons 273 to 424 of M13 iii but the DNA is approximately as different as possible from the wild-type DNA sequence. In Table 36, the III′ stump runs from base 8997 to base 9455. Below the DNA, as comments, are the differences with wild-type iii for the comparable codons with “!W.T” at the ends of these lines. Note that Met and Trp have only a single codon and must be left as is. These AA types are rare. Ser codons can be changed at all three base, while Leu and Arg codons can be changed at two.


In most cases, one base change can be introduced per codon. This has three advantages: 1) recombination with the wild-type gene carried elsewhere on the phage is less likely, 2) new restriction sites can be introduced, facilitating construction; and 3) sequencing primers that bind in only one of the two regions can be designed.


The fragment of M13 III shown in CJRA05 is the preferred length for the anchor segment. Alternative longer or shorter anchor segments defined by reference to whole mature III protein may also be utilized.


The sequence of M13 III consists of the following elements: Signal Sequence::Domain 1 (D1)::Linker 1 (L1)::Domain 2 (D2)::Linker 2 (L2)::Domain 3 (D3)::Transmembrane Segment (TM)::Intracellular anchor (IC) (see Table 38).


The pIII anchor (also known as trpIII) preferably consists of D2::L2::D3::TM::IC. Another embodiment for the pIII anchor consists of D2′::L2::D3::TM::IC (where D2′ comprises the last 21 residues of D2 with the first 109 residues deleted). A further embodiment of the pIII anchor consists of D2′(C>S)::L2::D3::TM::IC (where D2′(C>S) is D2′ with the single C converted to S), and d) D3::TM::IC.


Table 38 shows a gene fragment comprising the NotI site, His6 tag (SEQ ID NO: 12), cMyc tag, an amber codon, a recombinant enterokinase cleavage site, and the whole of mature M13 III protein. The DNA used to encode this sequence is intentionally very different from the DNA of wild-type gene iii as shown by the lines denoted “W.T.” containing the w.t. bases where these differ from this gene. III is divided into domains denoted “domain 1”, “linker 1”, “domain 2”, “linker 2”, “domain 3”, “transmembrane segment”, and “intracellular anchor”.


Alternative preferred anchor segments (defined by reference to the sequence of Table 38) include:


codons 1-29 joined to codons 104-435, deleting domain 1 and retaining linker 1 to the end;


codons 1-38 joined to codons 104-435, deleting domain land retaining the rEK cleavage site plus linker 1 to the end from III;


codons 1-29 joined to codons 236-435, deleting domain 1, linker 1, and most of domain 2 and retaining linker 2 to the end;


codons 1-38 joined to codons 236-435, deleting domain 1, linker 1, and most of domain 2 and retaining linker 2 to the end and the rEK cleavage site;


codons 1-29 joined to codons 236-435 and changing codon 240 to Ser(e.g., agc), deleting domain 1, linker 1, and most of domain 2 and retaining linker 2 to the end; and


codons 1-38 joined to codons 236-435 and changing codon 240 to Ser(e.g., agc), deleting domain 1, linker 1, and most of domain 2 and retaining linker 2 to the end and the rEK cleavage site.


The constructs would most readily be made by methods similar to those of Wang and Wilkinson (Biotechniques 2001: 31(4)722-724) in which PCR is used to copy the vector except the part to be deleted and matching restriction sites are introduced or retained at either end of the part to be kept. Table 39 shows the oligonucleotides to be used in deleting parts of the III anchor segment. The DNA shown in Table 38 has an NheI site before the DINDDRMA (residues 29-36 of SEQ ID NO: 594)_recombinant enterokinase cleavage site (rEKCS). If NheI is used in the deletion process with this DNA, the rEKCS site would be lost. This site could be quite useful in cleaving Fabs from the phage and might facilitate capture of very high-affinity antibodies. One could mutagenize this sequence so that the NheI site would follow the rEKCS site, an Ala Ser amino-acid sequence is already present. Alternatively, one could use SphI for the deletions. This would involve a slight change in amino acid sequence but would be of no consequence.


Example 7: Selection of Antigen Binders from an Enriched Library of Human Antibodies Using Phage Vector DY3F31

In this example the human antibody library used is described in de Haard et al., (Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274 (26): 18218-30 (1999). This library, consisting of a large non-immune human Fab phagemid library, was first enriched on antigen, either on streptavidin or on phenyl-oxazolone (phOx). The methods for this are well known in the art. Two preselected Fab libraries, the first one selected once on immobilized phOx-BSA (R1-ox) and the second one selected twice on streptavidin (R2-strep), were chosen for recloning.


These enriched repertoires of phage antibodies, in which only a very low percentage have binding activity to the antigen used in selection, were confirmed by screening clones in an ELISA for antigen binding. The selected Fab genes were transferred from the phagemid vector of this library to the DY3F31 vector via ApaL1-Not1 restriction sites.


DNA from the DY3F31 phage vector was pretreated with ATP dependent DNAse to remove chromosomal DNA and then digested with ApaL1 and Not1. An extra digestion with AscI was performed in between to prevent self-ligation of the vector. The ApaL1/NotI Fab fragment from the preselected libraries was subsequently ligated to the vector DNA and transformed into competent XL1-blue MRF′ cells.


Libraries were made using vector:insert ratios of 1:2 for phOx-library and 1:3 for STREP library, and using 100 ng ligated DNA per 50 μl of electroporation-competent cells (electroporation conditions:one shock of 1700 V, 1 hour recovery of cells in rich SOC medium, plating on ampicillin-containing agar plates).


This transformation resulted in a library size of 1.6×106 for R1-ox in DY3F31 and 2.1×106 for R2-strep in DY3F31. Sixteen colonies from each library were screened for insert, and all showed the correct size insert (±1400 bp) (for both libraries).


Phage was prepared from these Fab libraries as follows. A representative sample of the library was inoculated in medium with ampicillin and glucose, and at OD 0.5, the medium exchanged for ampicillin and 1 mM IPTG. After overnight growth at 37° C., phage was harvested from the supernatant by PEG-NaCl precipitation. Phage was used for selection on antigen. R1-ox was selected on phOx-BSA coated by passive adsorption onto immunotubes and R2-strep on streptavidin coated paramagnetic beads (Dynal, Norway), in procedures described in de Haard et. al. and Marks et. al., Journal of Molecular Biology, 222(3): 581-97 (1991). Phage titers and enrichments are given in Table 40.


Clones from these selected libraries, dubbed R2-ox and R3-strep respectively, were screened for binding to their antigens in ELISA. 44 clones from each selection were picked randomly and screened as phage or soluble Fab for binding in ELISA. For the libraries in DY3F31, clones were first grown in 2TY-2% glucose-50 pg/ml AMP to an OD600 of approximately 0.5, and then grown overnight in 2TY-50 μg/ml AMP+/−1 mM IPTG. Induction with IPTG may result in the production of both phage-Fab and soluble Fab. Therefore the (same) clones were also grown without IPTG. Table 41 shows the results of an ELISA screening of the resulting supernatant, either for the detection of phage particles with antigen binding (Anti-M13 HRP=anti-phage antibody), or for the detection of human Fabs, be it on phage or as soluble fragments, either with using the anti-myc antibody 9E10 which detects the myc-tag that every Fab carries at the C-terminal end of the heavy chain followed by a HRP-labeled rabbit-anti-Mouse serum (column 9E10/RAM-HRP), or with anti-light chain reagent followed by a HRP-labeled goat-anti-rabbit antiserum(anti-CK/CL Gar-HRP).


The results shows that in both cases antigen-binders are identified in the library, with as Fabs on phage or with the anti-Fab reagents (Table 41). IPTG induction yields an increase in the number of positives. Also it can be seen that for the phOx-clones, the phage ELISA yields more positives than the soluble Fab ELISA, most likely due to the avid binding of phage. Twenty four of the ELISA-positive clones were screened using PCR of the Fab-insert from the vector, followed by digestion with BstNI. This yielded 17 different patterns for the phOx-binding Fab's in 23 samples that were correctly analyzed, and 6 out of 24 for the streptavidin binding clones. Thus, the data from the selection and screening from this pre-enriched non-immune Fab library show that the DY3F31 vector is suitable for display and selection of Fab fragments, and provides both soluble Fab and Fab on phage for screening experiments after selection.


Example 8: Selection of Phage-Antibody Libraries on Streptavidin Magnetic Beads

The following example describes a selection in which one first depletes a sample of the library of binders to streptavidin and optionally of binders to a non-target (i.e., a molecule other than the target that one does not want the selected Fab to bind). It is hypothesized that one has a molecule, termed a “competitive ligand”, which binds the target and that an antibody which binds at the same site would be especially useful.


For this procedure Streptavidin Magnetic Beads (Dynal) were blocked once with blocking solution (2% Marvel Milk, PBS (pH 7.4), 0.01% Tween-20 (“2% MPBST”)) for 60 minutes at room temperature and then washed five times with 2% MPBST. 450 μL of beads were blocked for each depletion and subsequent selection set.


Per selection, 6.25 μL of biotinylated depletion target (1 mg/mL stock in PBST) was added to 0.250 mL of washed, blocked beads (from step 1). The target was allowed to bind overnight, with tumbling, at 4° C. The next day, the beads are washed 5 times with PBST.


Per selection, 0.010 mL of biotinylated target antigen (1 mg/mL stock in PBST) was added to 0.100 mL of blocked and washed beads (from step 1). The antigen was allowed to bind overnight, with tumbling, at 4° C. The next day, the beads were washed 5 times with PBST.


In round 1, 2×1012 up to 1013 plaque forming units (pfu) per selection were blocked against non-specific binding by adding to 0.500 mL of 2% MPBS (=2% MPBST without Tween) for 1 hr at RT (tumble). In later rounds, 1011 pfu per selection were blocked as done in round 1.


Each phage pool was incubated with 50 μL of depletion target beads (final wash supernatant removed just before use) on a Labquake rotator for 10 min at room temperature. After incubation, the phage supernatant was removed and incubated with another 50 μL of depletion target beads. This was repeated 3 more times using depletion target beads and twice using blocked streptavidin beads for a total of 7 rounds of depletion, so each phage pool required 350 μL of depletion beads.


A small sample of each depleted library pool was taken for titering. Each library pool was added to 0.100 mL of target beads (final wash supernatant was removed just before use) and allowed to incubate for 2 hours at room temperature (tumble).


Beads were then washed as rapidly as possible (e.g., 3 minutes total) with 5×0.500 mL PBST and then 2× with PBS. Phage still bound to beads after the washing were eluted once with 0.250 mL of competitive ligand (˜1 μμM) in PBST for 1 hour at room temperature on a Labquake rotator. The eluate was removed, mixed with 0.500 mL Minimal A salts solution and saved. For a second selection, 0.500 mL 100 mM TEA was used for elution for 10 min at RT, then neutralized in a mix of 0.250 mL of 1 M Tris, pH 7.4+0.500 mL Min A salts.


After the first selection elution, the beads can be eluted again with 0.300 mL of non-biotinylated target (1 mg/mL) for 1 hr at RT on a Labquake rotator. Eluted phage are added to 0.450 mL Minimal A salts.


Three eluates (competitor from 1st selection, target from 1st selection and neutralized TEA elution from 2nd selection) were kept separate and a small aliquot taken from each for titering. 0.500 mL Minimal A salts were added to the remaining bead aliquots after competitor and target elution and after TEA elution. Take a small aliquot from each was taken for tittering.


Each elution and each set of eluted beads was mixed with 2× YT and an aliquot (e.g., 1 mL with 1. E 10/mL) of XL1-Blue MRF′ E. coli cells (or other F′ cell line) which had been chilled on ice after having been grown to mid-logarithmic phase, starved and concentrated (see procedure below—“Mid-Log prep of XL-1 blue MRF′ cells for infection”).


After approximately 30 minutes at room temperature, the phage/cell mixtures were spread onto Bio-Assay Dishes (243×243×18 mm, Nalge Nunc) containing 2XYT, 1 mM IPTG agar. The plates were incubated overnight at 30° C. The next day, each amplified phage culture was harvested from its respective plate. The plate was flooded with 35 mL TBS or LB, and cells were scraped from the plate. The resuspended cells were transferred to a centrifuge bottle. An additional 20 mL TBS or LB was used to remove any cells from the plate and pooled with the cells in the centrifuge bottle. The cells were centrifuged out, and phage in the supernatant was recovered by PEG precipitation. Over the next day, the amplified phage preps were titered.


In the first round, two selections yielded five amplified eluates. These amplified eluates were panned for 2-3 more additional rounds of selection using ˜1. E 12 input phage/round. For each additional round, the depletion and target beads were prepared the night before the round was initiated.


For the elution steps in subsequent rounds, all elutions up to the elution step from which the amplified elution came from were done, and the previous elutions were treated as washes. For the bead infection amplified phage, for example, the competitive ligand and target elutions were done and then tossed as washes (see below). Then the beads were used to infect E. coli. Two pools, therefore, yielded a total of 5 final elutions at the end of the selection.


1st Selection Set

    • A. Ligand amplified elution: elute w/ ligand for 1 hr, keep as elution
    • B. Target amplified elution: elute w/ ligand for 1 hr, toss as wash elute w/ target for 1 hr, keep as elution
    • C. Bead infect. amp. elution: elute w/ ligand for 1 hr, toss as wash elute w/ target for 1 hr, toss as wash elute w/ cell infection, keep as elution


2nd Selection Set

    • A. TEA amplified elution; elute w/ TEA 10 min, keep as elution
    • B. Bead infect. amp. elution; elute w/ TEA 10 min, toss as wash elute w/ cell infection, keep as elution


Mid-Log Prep of XL1 Blue MRF′ Cells for Infection

(Based on Barbas et al. Phage Display Manual Procedure)


Culture XL1 blue MRF′ in NZCYM (12.5 mg/mL tet) at 37° C. and 250 rpm overnight. Started a 500 mL culture in 2 liter flask by diluting cells 1/50 in NZCYM/tet (10 mL overnight culture added) and incubated at 37° C. at 250 rpm until OD600 of 0.45 (1.5-2 hrs) was reached. Shaking was reduced to 100 rpm for 10 min. When OD600 reached between 0.55-0.65, cells were transferred to 2×250 mL centrifuge bottles, centrifuged at 600 g for 15 min at 4° C. Supernatant was poured off. Residual liquid was removed with a pipette.


The pellets were gently resuspended (not pipetting up and down) in the original volume of 1×Minimal A salts at room temp. The resuspended cells were transferred back into 2-liter flask, shaken at 100 rpm for 45 min at 37° C. This process was performed in order to starve the cells and restore pili. The cells were transferred to 2×250 mL centrifuge bottles, and centrifuged as earlier.


The cells were gently resuspended in ice cold Minimal A salts (5 mL per 500 mL original culture). The cells were put on ice for use in infections as soon as possible.


The phage eluates were brought up to 7.5 mL with 2XYT medium and 2.5 mL of cells were added. Beads were brought up to 3 mL with 2XYT and 1 mL of cells were added. Incubated at 37° C. for 30 min. The cells were plated on 2XYT, 1 mM IPTG agar large NUNC plates and incubated for 18 hr at 30° C.


Example 9: Incorporation of Synthetic Region in FR1/3 Region

Described below are examples for incorporating of fixed residues in antibody sequences for light chain kappa and lambda genes, and for heavy chains. The experimental conditions and oligonucleotides used for the examples below have been described in previous examples (e.g., Examples 3 & 4).


The process for incorporating fixed FR1 residues in an antibody lambda sequence consists of 3 steps (see FIG. 18): (1) annealing of single-stranded DNA material encoding VL genes to a partially complementary oligonucleotide mix (indicated with Ext and Bridge), to anneal in this example to the region encoding residues 5-7 of the FR1 of the lambda genes (indicated with X . . . X; within the lambda genes the overlap may sometimes not be perfect); (2) ligation of this complex; (3) PCR of the ligated material with the indicated primer (‘PCRpr’) and for example one primer based within the VL gene. In this process the first few residues of all lambda genes will be encoded by the sequences present in the oligonucleotides (Ext., Bridge or PCRpr). After the PCR, the lambda genes can be cloned using the indicated restriction site for ApaLI.


The process for incorporating fixed FR1 residues in an antibody kappa sequence (FIG. 19) consists of 3 steps: (1) annealing of single-stranded DNA material encoding VK genes to a partially complementary oligonucleotide mix (indicated with Ext and Bri), to anneal in this example to the region encoding residues 8-10 of the FR1 of the kappa genes (indicated with X . . . X; within the kappa genes the overlap may sometimes not be perfect); (2) ligation of this complex; (3) PCR of the ligated material with the indicated primer (‘PCRpr’) and for example one primer based within the VK gene. In this process the first few (8) residues of all kappa genes will be encode by the sequences present in the oligonucleotides (Ext., Bridge or PCRpr.). After the PCR, the kappa genes can be cloned using the indicated restriction site for ApaLI.


The process of incorporating fixed FR3 residues in a antibody heavy chain sequence (FIG. 20) consists of 3 steps: (1) annealing of single-stranded DNA material encoding part of the VH genes (for example encoding FR3, CDR3 and FR4 regions) to a partially complementary oligonucleotide mix (indicated with Ext and Bridge), to anneal in this example to the region encoding residues 92-94 (within the FR3 region) of VH genes (indicated with X . . . X; within the VH genes the overlap may sometimes not be perfect); (2) ligation of this complex; (3) PCR of the ligated material with the indicated primer (‘PCRpr’) and for example one primer based within the VH gene (such as in the FR4 region). In this process certain residues of all VH genes will be encoded by the sequences present in the oligonucleotides used here, in particular from PCRpr (for residues 70-73), or from Ext/Bridge oligonucleotides (residues 74-91). After the PCR, the partial VH genes can be cloned using the indicated restriction site for XbaI.


It will be understood that the foregoing is only illustrative of the principles of this invention and that various modifications can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of and sprit of the invention.









TABLE 1





Human GLG FR3 sequences
















!
VH1



66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75  76  77  78  79  80



agg gtc acc atg acc agg gac acg tcc atc agc aca gcc tac atg


!
81  82  82a 82b 82c 83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90  91  92



gag ctg agc agg ctg aga tct gac gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt


!
93  94  95



gcg aga ga ! 1-02# 1 (SEQ ID NO: 34)



aga gtc acc att acc agg gac aca tcc gcg agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gaa gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 1-03# 2 (SEQ ID NO: 35)



aga gtc acc atg acc agg aac acc tcc ata agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga gg ! 1-08# 3 (SEQ ID NO: 36)



aga gtc acc atg acc aca gac aca tcc acg agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agg agc ctg aga tct gac gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 1-18# 4 (SEQ ID NO: 37)



aga gtc acc atg acc gag gac aca tct aca gac aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gca aca ga ! 1-24# 5 (SEQ ID NO: 38)



aga gtc acc att acc agg gac agg tct atg agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac aca gcc atg tat tac tgt



gca aga ta ! 1-45# 6 (SEQ ID NO: 39)



aga gtc acc atg acc agg gac acg tcc acg agc aca gtc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 1-46# 7 (SEQ ID NO: 40)



aga gtc acc att acc agg gac atg tcc aca agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tcc gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg gca ga ! 1-58# 8 (SEQ ID NO: 41)



aga gtc acg att acc gcg gac gaa tcc acg agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 1-69# 9 (SEQ ID NO: 42)



aga gtc acg att acc gcg gac aaa tcc acg agc aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 1-e# 10 (SEQ ID NO: 43)



aga gtc acc ata acc gcg gac acg tct aca gac aca gcc tac atg



gag ctg agc agc ctg aga tct gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gca aca ga ! 1-f# 11 (SEQ ID NO: 44)





!
VH2



agg ctc acc atc acc aag gac acc tcc aaa aac cag gtg gtc ctt



aca atg acc aac atg gac cct gtg gac aca gcc aca tat tac tgt



gca cac aga c! 2-05# 12 (SEQ ID NO: 45)



agg ctc acc atc tcc aag gac acc tcc aaa agc cag gtg gtc ctt



acc atg acc aac atg gac cct gtg gac aca gcc aca tat tac tgt



gca cgg ata c! 2-26# 13 (SEQ ID NO: 46)



agg ctc acc atc tcc aag gac acc tcc aaa aac cag gtg gtc ctt



aca atg acc aac atg gac cct gtg gac aca gcc acg tat tac tgt



gca cgg ata c! 2-70# 14 (SEQ ID NO: 47)





!
VH3



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac gcc aag aac tca ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-07# 15 (SEQ ID NO: 48)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac gcc aag aac tcc ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agt ctg aga gct gag gac acg gcc ttg tat tac tgt



gca aaa gat a! 3-09#16 (SEQ ID NO: 49)



cga ttc acc atc tcc agg gac aac gcc aag aac tca ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-11# 17 (SEQ ID NO: 50)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gaa aat gcc aag aac tcc ttg tat ctt



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc ggg gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gca aga ga ! 3-13# 18 (SEQ ID NO: 51)



aga ttc acc atc tca aga gat gat tca aaa aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aaa acc gag gac aca gcc gtg tat tac tgt



acc aca ga ! 3-15# 19 (SEQ ID NO: 52)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac gcc aag aac tcc ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agt ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gcc ttg tat cac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-20# 20 (SEQ ID NO: 53)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac gcc aag aac tca ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-21# 21 (SEQ ID NO: 54)



cgg ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gcc gta tat tac tgt



gcg aaa ga ! 3-23# 22 (SEQ ID NO: 55)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gct gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aaa ga ! 3-30# 23 (SEQ ID NO: 56)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gct gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3303# 24 (SEQ ID NO: 57)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gct gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aaa ga ! 3305# 25 (SEQ ID NO: 58)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-33# 26 (SEQ ID NO: 59)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac agc aaa aac tcc ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agt ctg aga act gag gac acc gcc ttg tat tac tgt



gca aaa gat a! 3-43#27 (SEQ ID NO: 60)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat gcc aag aac tca ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gac gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-48# 28 (SEQ ID NO: 61)



aga ttc acc atc tca aga gat ggt tcc aaa agc atc gcc tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aaa acc gag gac aca gcc gtg tat tac tgt



act aga ga ! 3-49# 29 (SEQ ID NO: 62)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctt



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-53# 30 (SEQ ID NO: 63)



aga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctt



caa atg ggc agc ctg aga gct gag gac atg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-64# 31 (SEQ ID NO: 64)



aga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctt



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gct gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 3-66# 32 (SEQ ID NO: 65)



aga ttc acc atc tca aga gat gat tca aag aac tca ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aaa acc gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gct aga ga ! 3-72# 33 (SEQ ID NO: 66)



agg ttc acc atc tcc aga gat gat tca aag aac acg gcg tat ctg



caa atg aac agc ctg aaa acc gag gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



act aga ca ! 3-73# 34 (SEQ ID NO: 67)



cga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aac gcc aag aac acg ctg tat ctg



caa atg aac agt ctg aga gcc gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gca aga ga ! 3-74# 35 (SEQ ID NO: 68)



aga ttc acc atc tcc aga gac aat tcc aag aac acg ctg cat ctt



caa atg aac agc ctg aga gct gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



aag aaa ga ! 3-d# 36 (SEQ ID NO: 69)





!
VH4



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac aag tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-04# 37 (SEQ ID NO: 70)



cga gtc acc atg tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gtg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga aa ! 4-28# 38 (SEQ ID NO: 71)



cga gtt acc ata tca gta gac acg tct aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg act gcc gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4301# 39 (SEQ ID NO: 72)



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac agg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcc aga ga ! 4302# 40 (SEQ ID NO: 73)



cga gtt acc ata tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg act gcc gca gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcc aga ga ! 4304# 41 (SEQ ID NO: 74)



cga gtt acc ata tca gta gac acg tct aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg act gcc gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-31# 42 (SEQ ID NO: 75)



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gcg gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-34# 43 (SEQ ID NO: 76)



cga gtc acc ata tcc gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gca gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ca ! 4-39# 44 (SEQ ID NO: 77)



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gct gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-59# 45 (SEQ ID NO: 78)



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gct gcg gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-61# 46 (SEQ ID NO: 79)



cga gtc acc ata tca gta gac acg tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



aag ctg agc tct gtg acc gcc gca gac acg gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 4-b# 47 (SEQ ID NO: 80)





!
VH5



cag gtc acc atc tca gcc gac aag tcc atc agc acc gcc tac ctg



cag tgg agc agc ctg aag gcc tcg gac acc gcc atg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ca ! 5-51# 48 (SEQ ID NO: 81)



cac gtc acc atc tca gct gac aag tcc atc agc act gcc tac ctg



cag tgg agc agc ctg aag gcc tcg gac acc gcc atg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ! 5-a# 49 (SEQ ID NO: 82)





!
VH6



cga ata acc atc aac cca gac aca tcc aag aac cag ttc tcc ctg



cag ctg aac tct gtg act ccc gag gac acg gct gtg tat tac tgt



gca aga ga ! 6-1# 50 (SEQ ID NO: 83)





!
VH7



cgg ttt gtc ttc tcc ttg gac acc tct gtc agc acg gca tat ctg



cag atg tgc agc cta aag gct gag gac act gcc gtg tat tac tgt



gcg aga ga ! 74.1# 51 (SEQ ID NO: 84)
















TABLE 2





Enzymes that either cut 15 or more human GLGs or


have 5+− base recoanition in FR3


Typical entry:
















REname Recognition
#sites









GLGid#: base#
GLGid#: base#
GLGid#: base# . . .











BstEII Ggtnacc
2





















 1:
 3
48:
 3


















There are 2 hits at base# 3











MaeIII gtnac
36





















 1:
 4
 2:
 4
 3:
 4
 4:
 4
 5:
 4
 6:
 4


 7:
 4
 8:
 4
 9:
 4
10:
 4
11:
 4
37:
 4


37:
58
38:
 4
38:
58
39:
 4
39:
58
40:
 4


40:
58
41:
 4
41:
58
42:
 4
42:
58
43:
 4


43:
58
44:
 4
44:
58
45:
 4
45:
58
46:
 4


46:
58
47:
 4
47:
58
48:
 4
49:
 4
50:
58










There are 24 hits at base# 4











Tsp45I gtsac
33





















 1:
 4
 2:
 4
 3:
 4
 4:
 4
 5:
 4
 6:
 4


 7:
 4
 8:
 4
 9:
 4
10:
 4
11:
 4
37:
 4


37:
58
38:
 4
38:
58
39:
58
40:
 4
40:
58


41:
58
42:
58
43:
 4
43:
58
44:
 4
44:
58


45:
 4
45:
58
46:
 4
46:
58
47:
 4
47:
58


48:
 4
49:
 4
50:
58










There are 21 hits at base# 4











HphI tcacc
45





















 1:
 5
 2:
 5
 3:
 5
 4:
 5
 5:
 5
 6:
 5


 7:
 5
 8:
 5
11:
 5
12:
 5
12:
11
13:
 5


14:
 5
15:
 5
16:
 5
17:
 5
18:
 5
19:
 5


20:
 5
21:
 5
22:
 5
23:
 5
24:
 5
25:
 5


26:
 5
27:
 5
28:
 5
29:
 5
30:
 5
31:
 5


32:
 5
33:
 5
34:
 5
35:
 5
36:
 5
37:
 5


38:
 5
40:
 5
43:
 5
44:
 5
45:
 5
46:
 5


47:
 5
48:
 5
49:
 5










There are 44 hits at base# 5











NlaIII CATG
26





















 1:
 9
 1:
42
 2:
42
 3:
 9
 3:
42
 4:
 9


 4:
42
 5:
 9
 5:
42
 6:
42
 6:
78
 7:
 9


 7:
42
 8:
21
 8:
42
 9:
42
10:
42
11:
42


12:
57
13:
48
13:
57
14:
57
31:
72
38:
 9


48:
78
49:
78










There are 11 hits at base# 42


There are 1 hits at base# 48 Could cause raggedness.











BsaJI Ccnngg
37





















 1:
14
 2:
14
 5:
14
 6:
14
 7:
14
 8:
14


 8:
65
 9:
14
10:
14
11:
14
12:
14
13:
14


14:
14
15:
65
17:
14
17:
65
18:
65
19:
65


20:
65
21:
65
22:
65
26:
65
29:
65
30:
65


33:
65
34:
65
35:
65
37:
65
38:
65
39:
65


40:
65
42:
65
43:
65
48:
65
49:
65
50:
65


51:
14










There are 23 hits at base# 65


There are 14 hits at base# 14











AluI AGct
42





















 1:
47
 2:
47
 3:
47
 4:
47
 5:
47
 6:
47


 7:
47
 8:
47
 9:
47
10:
47
11:
47
16:
63


23:
63
24:
63
25:
63
31:
63
32:
63
36:
63


37:
47
37:
52
38:
47
38:
52
39:
47
39:
52


40:
47
40:
52
41:
47
41:
52
42:
47
42:
52


43:
47
43:
52
44:
47
44:
52
45:
47
45:
52


46:
47
46:
52
47:
47
47:
52
49:
15
50:
47










There are 23 hits at base# 47


There are 11 hits at base# 52 Only 5 bases from 47











BlpI GCtnagc
21





















 1:
48
 2:
48
 3:
48
 5:
48
 6:
48
 7:
48


 8:
48
 9:
48
10:
48
11:
48
37:
48
38:
48


39:
48
40:
48
41:
48
42:
48
43:
48
44:
48


45:
48
46:
48
47:
48










There are 21 hits at base# 48











MwoI GCNNNNNnngc



(SEQ ID NO: 85)
19





















 1:
48
 2:
28
19:
36
22:
36
23:
36
24:
36


25:
36
26:
36
35:
36
37:
67
39:
67
40:
67


41:
67
42:
67
43:
67
44:
67
45:
67
46:
67


47:
67










There are 10 hits at base# 67


There are 7 hits at base# 36











DdeI Ctnag
71





















 1:
49
 1:
58
 2:
49
 2:
58
 3:
49
 3:
58


 3:
65
 4:
49
 4:
58
 5:
49
 5:
58
 5:
65


 6:
49
 6:
58
 6:
65
 7:
49
 7:
58
 7:
65


 8:
49
 8:
58
 9:
49
 9:
58
 9:
65
10:
49


10:
58
10:
65
11:
49
11:
58
11:
65
15:
58


16:
58
16:
65
17:
58
18:
58
20:
58
21:
58


22:
58
23:
58
23:
65
24:
58
24:
65
25:
58


25:
65
26:
58
27:
58
27:
65
28:
58
30:
58


31:
58
31:
65
32:
58
32:
65
35:
58
36:
58


36:
65
37:
49
38:
49
39:
26
39:
49
40:
49


41:
49
42:
26
42:
49
43:
49
44:
49
45:
49


46:
49
47:
49
48:
12
49:
12
51:
65










There are 29 hits at base# 58


There are 22 hits at base# 49 Only nine base from 58


There are 16 hits at base# 65 Only seven bases from 58











BglII Agatct
11





















 1:
61
 2:
61
 3:
61
 4:
61
 5:
61
 6:
61


 7:
61
 9:
61
10:
61
11:
61
51:
47










There are 10 hits at base# 61











BstYI Rgatcy
12





















 1:
61
 2:
61
 3:
61
4:
61
 5:
61
 6:
61


 7:
61
 8:
61
 9:
61
10:
61
11:
61
51:
47










There are 11 hits at base# 61











Hpy188I TCNga
17





















 1:
64
 2:
64
 3:
64
 4:
64
 5:
64
 6:
64


 7:
64
 8:
64
 9:
64
10:
64
11:
64
16:
57


20:
57
27:
57
35:
57
48:
67
49:
67










There are 11 hits at base# 64


There are 4 hits at base# 57


There are 2 hits at base# 67 Could be ragged.











MslI CAYNNnnRTG



(SEQ ID NO: 86)
44





















 1:
72
 2:
72
 3:
72
 4:
72
 5:
72
 6:
72


 7:
72
 8:
72
 9:
72
10:
72
11:
72
15:
72


17:
72
18:
72
19:
72
21:
72
23:
72
24:
72


25:
72
26:
72
28:
72
29:
72
30:
72
31:
72


32:
72
33:
72
34:
72
35:
72
36:
72
37:
72


38:
72
39:
72
40:
72
41:
72
42:
72
43:
72


44:
72
45:
72
46:
72
47:
72
48:
72
49:
72


50:
72
51:
72










There are 44 hits at base# 72











BsiEI CGRYcg
23





















 1:
74
 3:
74
 4:
74
 5:
74
 7:
74
 8:
74


 9:
74
10:
74
11:
74
17:
74
22:
74
30:
74


33:
74
34:
74
37:
74
38:
74
39:
74
40:
74


41:
74
42:
74
45:
74
46:
74
47:
74










There are 23 hits at base# 74











EaeI Yggccr
23





















 1:
74
 3:
74
 4:
74
 5:
74
 7:
74
 8:
74


 9:
74
10:
74
11:
74
17:
74
22:
74
30:
74


33:
74
34:
74
37:
74
38:
74
39:
74
40:
74


41:
74
42:
74
45:
74
46:
74
47:
74










There are 23 hits at base# 74











EagI Cggccg
23





















 1:
74
 3:
74
 4:
74
 5:
74
 7:
74
 8:
74


 9:
74
10:
74
11:
74
17:
74
22:
74
30:
74


33:
74
34:
74
37:
74
38:
74
39:
74
40:
74


41:
74
42:
74
45:
74
46:
74
47:
74










There are 23 hits at base# 74











HaeIII GGcc
27





















 1:
75
 3:
75
 4:
75
 5:
75
 7:
75
 8:
75


 9:
75
10:
75
11:
75
16:
75
17:
75
20:
75


22:
75
30:
75
33:
75
34:
75
37:
75
38:
75


39:
75
40:
75
41:
75
42:
75
45:
75
46:
75


47:
75
48:
63
49:
63










There are 25 hits at base# 75











Bst4CI ACNgt 65° C. 63 Sites
There is a third isoschismer





















 1:
86
 2:
86
 3:
86
 4:
86
 5:
86
 6:
86


 7:
34
 7:
86
 8:
86
 9:
86
10:
86
11:
86


12:
86
13:
86
14:
86
15:
36
15:
86
16:
53


16:
86
17:
36
17:
86
18:
86
19:
86
20:
53


20:
86
21:
36
21:
86
22:
 0
22:
86
23:
86


24:
86
25:
86
26:
86
27:
53
27:
86
28:
36


28:
86
29:
86
30:
86
31:
86
32:
86
33:
36


33:
86
34:
86
35:
53
35:
86
36:
86
37:
86


38:
86
39:
86
40:
86
41:
86
42:
86
43:
86


44:
86
45:
86
46:
86
47:
86
48:
86
49:
86


50:
86
51:
 0
51:
86










There are 51 hits at base# 86 All the other sites are well away











HpyCH4III ACNgt
63





















 1:
86
 2:
86
 3:
86
 4:
86
 5:
86
 6:
86


 7:
34
 7:
86
 8:
86
 9:
86
10:
86
11:
86


12:
86
13:
86
14:
86
15:
36
15:
86
16:
53


16:
86
17:
36
17:
86
18:
86
19:
86
20:
53


20:
86
21:
36
21:
86
22:
 0
22:
86
23:
86


24:
86
25:
86
26:
86
27:
53
27:
86
28:
36


28:
86
29:
86
30:
86
31:
86
32:
86
33:
36


33:
86
34:
86
35:
53
35:
86
36:
86
37:
86


38:
86
39:
86
40:
86
41:
86
42:
86
43:
86


44:
86
45:
86
46:
86
47:
86
48:
86
49:
86


50:
86
51:
 0
51:
86










There are 51 hits at base# 86











HinfI Gantc
43





















 2:
 2
 3:
 2
 4:
 2
 5:
 2
 6:
 2
 7:
 2


 8:
 2
 9:
 2
 9:
22
10:
 2
11:
 2
15:
 2


16:
 2
17:
 2
18:
 2
19:
 2
19:
22
20:
 2


21:
 2
23:
 2
24:
 2
25:
 2
26:
 2
27:
 2


28:
 2
29:
 2
30:
 2
31:
 2
32:
 2
33:
 2


33:
22
34:
22
35:
 2
36:
 2
37:
 2
38:
 2


40:
 2
43:
 2
44:
 2
45:
 2
46:
 2
47:
 2


50:
60










There are 38 hits at base# 2











MlyI GAGTCNNNNNn



(SEQ ID NO: 87)
18





















 2:
 2
 3:
 2
 4:
 2
 5:
 2
 6:
 2
 7:
 2


 8:
 2
 9:
 2
10:
 2
11:
 2
37:
 2
38:
 2


40:
 2
43:
 2
44:
 2
45:
 2
46:
 2
47:
 2










There are 18 hits at base# 2











PleI gagtc
18





















 2:
 2
 3:
 2
 4:
 2
 5:
 2
 6:
 2
 7:
 2


 8:
 2
 9:
 2
10:
 2
11:
 2
37:
 2
38:
 2


40:
 2
43:
 2
44:
 2
45:
 2
46:
 2
47:
 2










There are 18 hits at base# 2











AciI Ccgc
24





















 2:
26
 9:
14
10:
14
11:
14
27:
74
37:
62


37:
65
38:
62
39:
65
40:
62
40:
65
41:
65


42:
65
43:
62
43:
65
44:
62
44:
65
45:
62


46:
62
47:
62
47:
65
48:
35
48:
74
49:
74










There are 8 hits at base# 62


There are 8 hits at base# 65


There are 3 hits at base# 14


There are 3 hits at base# 74


There are 1 hits at base# 26


There are 1 hits at base# 35











-″- Gcgg
11





















 8:
91
 9:
16
10:
16
11:
16
37:
67
39:
67


40:
67
42:
67
43:
67
45:
67
46:
67










There are 7 hits at base# 67


There are 3 hits at base# 16


There are 1 hits at base# 91











BsiHKAI GWGCWc
20





















 2:
30
 4:
30
 6:
30
 7:
30
 9:
30
10:
30


12:
89
13:
89
14:
89
37:
51
38:
51
39:
51


40:
51
41:
51
42:
51
43:
51
44:
51
45:
51


46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51











Bsp1286I GDGCHc
20





















 2:
30
 4:
30
 6:
30
 7:
30
 9:
30
10:
30


12:
89
13:
89
14:
89
37:
51
38:
51
39:
51


40:
51
41:
51
42:
51
43:
51
44:
51
45:
51


46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51











HgiAI GWGCWc
20





















 2:
30
 4:
30
 6:
30
 7:
30
 9:
30
10:
30


12:
89
13:
89
14:
89
37:
51
38:
51
39:
51


40:
51
41:
51
42:
51
43:
51
44:
51
45:
51


46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51











BsoFI GCngc
26





















 2:
53
 3:
53
 5:
53
 6:
53
 7:
53
 8:
53


 8:
91
 9:
53
10:
53
11:
53
31:
53
36:
36


37:
64
39:
64
40:
64
41:
64
42:
64
43:
64


44:
64
45:
64
46:
64
47:
64
48:
53
49:
53


50:
45
51:
53










There are 13 hits at base# 53


There are 10 hits at base# 64











TseI Gcwgc
17





















 2:
53
 3:
53
 5:
53
 6:
53
 7:
53
 8:
53


 9:
53
10:
53
11:
53
31:
53
36:
36
45:
64


46:
64
48:
53
49:
53
50:
45
51:
53










There are 13 hits at base# 53











MhlI gagg
34





















 3:
67
 3:
95
 4:
51
 5:
16
 5:
67
 6:
67


 7:
67
 8:
67
 9:
67
10:
67
11:
67
15:
67


16:
67
17:
67
19:
67
20:
67
21:
67
22:
67


23:
67
24:
67
25:
67
26:
67
27:
67
28:
67


29:
67
30:
67
31:
67
32:
67
33:
67
34:
67


35:
67
36:
67
50:
67
51:
67










There are 31 hits at base# 67











HpyCH4V TGca
34





















 5:
90
 6:
90
11:
90
12:
90
13:
90
14:
90


15:
44
16:
44
16:
90
17:
44
18:
90
19:
44


20:
44
21:
44
22:
44
23:
44
24:
44
25:
44


26:
44
27:
44
27:
90
28:
44
29:
44
33:
44


34:
44
35:
44
35:
90
36:
38
48:
44
49:
44


50:
44
50:
90
51:
44
51:
52










There are 21 hits at base# 44


There are 1 hits at base# 52











AccI GTmkac
13 5-base recognition





















 7:
37
11:
24
37:
16
38:
16
39:
16
40:
16


41:
16
42:
16
43:
16
44:
16
45:
16
46:
16


47:
16










There are 11 hits at base# 16











SacII CCGCgg
8 6-base recognition





















 9:
14
10:
14
11:
14
37:
65
39:
65
40:
65


42:
65
43:
65










There are 5 hits at base# 65


There are 3 hits at base# 14











TfiI Gawtc
24





















 9:
22
15:
 2
16:
 2
17:
 2
18:
 2
19:
 2


19:
22
20:
 2
21:
 2
23:
 2
24:
 2
25:
 2


26:
 2
27:
 2
28:
 2
29:
 2
30:
 2
31:
 2


32:
 2
33:
 2
33:
22
34:
22
35:
 2
36:
 2










There are 20 hits at base# 2











BsmAI Nnnnnngagac



(SEQ ID NO: 88)
19





















15:
11
16:
11
20:
11
21:
11
22:
11
23:
11


24:
11
25:
11
26:
11
27:
11
28:
11
28:
56


30:
11
31:
11
32:
11
35:
11
36:
11
44:
87


48:
87










There are 16 hits at base# 11











BpmI ctccag
19





















15:
12
16:
12
17:
12
18:
12
20:
12
21:
12


22:
12
23:
12
24:
12
25:
12
26:
12
27:
12


28:
12
30:
12
31:
12
32:
12
34:
12
35:
12


36:
12










There are 19 hits at base# 12











XmnI GAANNnnttc



(SEQ ID NO: 89)
12





















37:
30
38:
30
39:
30
40:
30
41:
30
42:
30


43:
30
44:
30
45:
30
46:
30
47:
30
50:
30










There are 12 hits at base# 30











BsrI NCcagt
12





















37:
32
38:
32
39:
32
40:
32
41:
32
42:
32


43:
32
44:
32
45:
32
46:
32
47:
32
50:
32










There are 12 hits at base# 32











BanII GRGCYc
11





















37:
51
38:
51
39:
51
40:
51
41:
51
42:
51


43:
51
44:
51
45:
51
46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51











Ecl136I GAGctc
11





















37:
51
38:
51
39:
51
40:
51
41:
51
42:
51


43:
51
44:
51
45:
51
46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51











SacI GAGCTc
11





















37:
51
38:
51
39:
51
40:
51
41:
51
42:
51


43:
51
44:
51
45:
51
46:
51
47:
51










There are 11 hits at base# 51
















TABLE 3





Synthetic 3-23 FR3 of human heavy chains showning


positions of possible cleavage sites















Sites engineered into the synthetic gene are shown in upper case


DNA with the RE name between vertical bars (as in |+0 XbaI |).


RERSs frequently found in GLGs are shown below the synthetic


sequence with the name to the right (as in gtn ac = MaeIII(24),


indicating that 24 of the 51 GLGs contain the site).








                                                         | ---FR3---



                                                          89  90 (codon #



in



                                                           R   F



synthetic 3-23)



                                                         |cgc|ttc|
6


Allowed DNA                                              |cgn|tty|



                                                         |agr|



                                                           ga ntc =



HinfI(38)



                                                           ga gtc =



PleI(18)



                                                           ga wtc =



TfiI(20)



                                                             gtn ac =



MaeIII(24)



                                                             gts ac =



Tsp45I(21)



                                                              tc acc =



HphI(44)






       --------FR3--------------------------------------------------



         91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105



         T   I   S   R   D   N   S   K   N   T   L   Y   L   Q   M



(SEQ ID NO: 91)






       |act|atc|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|
51


allowed|acn|ath|tcn|cgn|gay|aay|tcn|aar|aay|acn|ttr|tay|ttr|car|atg|



(SEQ ID NO: 90)






               |agy|agr|      |agy|          |ctn|  |ctn|



                  |     ga|gac = BsmAI(16)                      ag ct =



AluI(23)



              c|tcc ag = BpmI(19)                             g ctn agc =



BlpI(21)



               |       |            g aan nnn ttc = XmnI(12)



               |XbaI   |                                tg ca = HpyCH4V(21)



       ---FR3----------------------------------------------------->|



        106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120



         N   S   L   R   A   E   N   T   A   V   Y   Y   C   A   K



       |aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgc|gct|aaa|
96


allowed|aay|tcn|ttr|cgn|gcn|gar|gay|acn|gcn|gtn|tay|tay|tgy|gcn|aar|



           |agy|ctn|agr|             |     |



              |      |   cc nng g = BsaJI(23)        ac ngt = Bst4CI(51)



              |     aga tct = BglII(10)    |         ac ngt = HpyCH4III(51)



              |     Rga tcY = BstYI(11)    |         ac ngt = TaaI(51)



              |      |            c ayn nnn rtc = MslI(44)



              |      |               cg ryc g = BsiEI(23)



              |      |               yg gcc r = EaeI(23)



              |      |               cg gcc g = EagI(23)



              |      |               |g gcc = HaeIII(25)



              |      |      gag g = MnlI(31)|



              |AflII |               | PstI |
















TABLE 4





REdaptors, Extenders, and Bridges used for Cleavage and


Capture of Human Heavy Chains in FR3.







A: HpyCH4V Probes of actual human HC genes (SEQ ID NOs: 92-100,


respectively, in order of appearance)





HpyCH4V in FR3 of human HC, bases 35-56; only those with TGca site


TGca; 10,


RE recognition: tgca of length 4 is expected at 10









1
6-1

agttctccctgcagctgaactc



2
3-11,3-07,3-21,3-72,3-48

cactgtatctgcaaatgaacag



3
3-09,3-43,3-20
coctgtatctgcaaatgaacag


4
5-51

ccgcctacctgcagtggagcag



5
3-15,3-30,3-30.5,3-30.3,3-74,3-23,3-33

cgctgtatctgcaaatgaacag



6
7-4.1
cggcatatctgcagatctgcag


7
3-73
cggcgtatctgcaaatgaacag


8
5-a
ctgcctacctgcagtggagcag


9
3-49
tcgcctatctgcaaatgaacag










B: HpyCH4V REdaptors, Extenders, and Bridges





B.1 REdaptors


Cutting HC lower strand:


TmKeller for 100 mM NaCl, zero formamide


















SEQ


Edapters for cleavage

TmW
TmK
ID NO:





(ON_HCFR36-1)
5′-agttctcccTGCAgctgaactc-3′
68.0
64.5
92


(ON_HCFR36-1A
5′-ttctcccTGCAgctgaactc-3′
62.0
62.5
residues






3-22 of 92


(ON_HOFR36-1B)
5′-ttctcccTGCAgctgaac-3′
56.0
59.9
residues






3-20 of 92


(ON_HCFR33-15)
5′-cgctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag-3′
64.0
60.8
96


(ON_HOFR33-15A)
5′-ctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag-3′
56.0
56.3
residues






3-22 of 96


(ON_HCFR33-15B)
5′-ctgtatcTGCAaatgaac-3′
50.0
53.1
residues






3-20 of 96


(ON_HCFR33-11)
5′-cactgtatcTGCAaatgaacag-3′
62.0
58.9
93


(ON_HCFR35-51)
5′-ccgcctaccTGCAgtggagcag-3′
74.0
70.1
95










B.2 Segment of synthetic 3-23 gene into which captured CDR3 is to


be cloned












             XbaI... (SEQ ID NO: 101)


D323*
cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac aaC tcT aag aaT acT ctC taC



scab designed gene 3-23 gene


HpyCH4V
.. ..              AflII...



Ttg caG atg aac agc TtA agG . . .



........................... . . .










B.3 Extender and Bridges





Extender (bottom strand):









(SEQ ID NO: 102)


(ON_HCHpyEx01)
5′-cAAgTAgAgAgTATTcTTAgAgTTgTcTcTAgAcTTAgTgAAgcg-3′


ON_HCHpyEx01 is the reverse
5′-cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac aaC tcT aag aaT acT ctC tat Ttg -3′


complement of











Bridges (top strand, 9-base overlap):









(SEQ ID NO: 103)


(ON_HCHpvBr016-1)
5′-cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac aaC tcT aag-



aaT acT ctC tat Ttg CAgctgaac-3′ (3′-term C is



blocked)


3-15 et al. + 3-11
(SEQ ID NO: 104)


(ON_HCHpyBr023-15)
5′-cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac aaC tcT aag-



aaT acT ctC tat Ttg CAaatgaac-3′ (3′-term C is



blocked)


5-51
(SEQ ID NO: 105)


(ON_HCHpvBr045-51)
5′-cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac aaC tcT aag-



aaT acT ctC taC Ttg CAgtggagc-3′ (3′-term C is



blocked)










PCR primer (top strand)








(ON_HCHpyPCR)
5′-cgCttcacTaag tcT aga gac-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 106)










C: BlpI Probes from human HC GLGs





 1 1-58, 1-03, 1-08, 1-69, 1-24, 1-45, 1-46, 1-f, 1-e


acatggaGCTGAGCagcctgag (SEQ ID NO: 107)


 2 1-02


acatggaGCTGAGCaggctgag (SEQ ID NO: 108)


 3 1-18


acatggagctgaggagcctgag (SEQ ID NO: 109)


 4 5-51,5-a


acctgcagtggagcagcctgaa (SEQ ID NO: 110)


 5 3-15,3-73,3-45,3-72


atctgcaaatgaacagcctgaa (SEQ ID NO: 111)


 6 3303,3-33,3-07,3-11,3-30,3-21,3-23,3305,3-48


atctgcaaatgaacagcctgag (SEQ ID NO: 112)


 7 3-20,3-74,3-09,3-43


atctgcaaatgaacagtctgag (SEQ ID NO: 113)


 8 74.1


atctgcagatctgcagcctaaa (SEQ ID NO: 114)


 9 3-66,3-13,3-53,3-d


atcttcaaatgaacagcctgag (SEQ ID NO: 115)


 10 3-64


atcttcaaatgggcagcctgag (SEQ ID NO: 116)


 11 4301,4-28,4302,4-04,4304,4-31,4-34,4-39,4-59,4-61,4-b


ccctgaaGCTGAGCtctgtgac (SEQ ID NO: 117)


 12 6-1


ccctgcagctgaactctgtgac (SEQ ID NO: 118)


 13 2-70,2-05


tccttacaatgaccaacatgga (SEQ ID NO: 119)


 14 2-26


tccttaccatgaccaacatgga (SEQ ID NO: 120)





D: BlpI REdaptors, Extenders, and Bridges





D.1 REdaptors












TmW
TmK





(BlpF3HC1-58)
5′-ac atg gaG CTG AGC agc ctg ag-3′
70
66.4



(SEQ ID NO: 121)




(BlpF3HC6-1)
5′-cc ctg aag ctg agc tct gtg ac-3′
70
66.4



(SEQ ID NO: 122)









BlpF3HC6-1 matches 4-30.1, not 6-1.





D.2 Segment of synthetic 3-23 gene into which captured CDR3 is to be cloned





BlpI


             XbaI... .


... ...


D323*


cgCttcacTaag TCT AGA gac aaC tcT aag aaT acT ctC taC Ttg


caG atg aac (SEQ ID NO: 123)





  AflII...


agC TTA AGG





D.3 Extender and Bridges





Bridges


(BlpF3Br1)


5′-cgCttcacTcag tcT aga gaT aaC AGT aaA aaT acT TtG-


       taC Ttg caG Ctg a|GC agc ctg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 124)


(BlpF3Br2)


5′-cgCttcacTcag tcT aga gaT aaC AGT aaA aaT acT TtG-


       taC Ttg caG Ctg a|gc tct gtg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 125)


                        | lower strand is cut here





Extender


(BlpF3Ext)


5′-TcAgcTgcAAgTAcAAAgTATTTTTAcTgTTATcTcTAgAcTgAgTgAAgcg-


3′ (SEQ ID NO: 126)


BlpF3Ext is the reverse complement of:


5′-cgCttcacTcag tcT aga gaT aaC AGT aaA aaT acT TtG taC Ttg caG


Ctg a-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 127)


(BLpF3PCR)


5′-cgCttcacTcaa tcT aga gaT aaC-3′





E: HpyCH4III Distinct GLG sequences surrounding site, bases 77-98





1


102#1, 118#4, 146#7, 169#9, 1e#10, 311#17, 353#30, 404#37, 4301


ccgtgtattactgtcgagaga (SEQ ID NO: 128)


2


103#2, 307#15, 321#21, 3303#24, 333#26, 348#28, 364#31, 366#32


ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaga (SEQ ID NO: 129)


3


108#3 ccgtgtattactgtgcgagagg (SEQ ID NO: 130)


4


124#5, 1f#11 ccgtgtattactgtgcaacaga (SEQ ID NO: 131)


5


145#6 ccatgtattactgtgcaagata (SEQ ID NO: 132)


6


158#8 ccgtgtattactgtgcggcaga (SEQ ID NO: 133)


7


205#12 ccacatattactgtgcacacag (SEQ ID NO: 134)


3


226#13 ccacatattactgtgcacggat (SEQ ID NO: 135)


9


270#14 ccacgtattactgtgcacggat (SEQ ID NO: 136)


10


309#16, 343#27 ccttgtattactgtgcaaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 137)


11


313#13, 374#35, 61#50 ctgtgtattactgtgcaagaga (SEQ ID NO: 138)


12


315#19 ccgtgtattactgtaccacaga (SEQ ID NO: 139)


13


320#20 ccttgtatcactgtgcgagaga (SEQ ID NO: 140)


14


323#22 ccgtatattactgtgcgaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 141)


15


330#23, 3305#25 ctgtgtattactgtgcgaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 142)


16


349#29 ccgtgtattactgtactagaga (SEQ ID NO: 143)


17


372#33 ccgtgtattactgtgctagaga (SEQ ID NO: 144)


13


373#34 ccgtgtattactgtactagaca (SEQ ID NO: 145)


19


3d#36 cttgtattactgtaagaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 146)


20


428438 ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaaa (SEQ ID NO: 147)


21


4302#40, 4304#41 ccgtgtattactgtgccagaga (SEQ ID NO: 148)


22


439#44 ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaca (SEQ ID NO: 149)


23


551#48 ccatgtattactgtgcgagaca (SEQ ID NO: 150)


24


5a#49 ccattattactgtgcgaga (SEQ ID NO: 151)





F: gpyCH4III REdaptors, Extenders, and Bridges





F.1 REdaptors


(SEQ ID NOs: 152-159, respectively, in order of appearance)


ONs for cleavage of HC(lower) in FR3(bases 77-97)


For cleavage with HpyCH4III, Bst4CI, or TaaI


cleavage is in lower chain before base 88.













   77 788 888 888 889 999 999 9



TmK
   78 901 234 567 890 123 456 7
TmW





(H43.77.97.1-02#1)
5′-cc gtg tat tAC TGT gcg aga g-3′
6462.6


(H43.77.97.1-03#2)
5′-ct gtg tat tAC TGT acg aga g-3′
6260.6


(H43.77.97.108#3)
5′-cc gtg tat tAC TGT gcg aga g-3′
6462.6


(H43.77.97.323#22)
5′-cc gta tat tac tgt gcg aaa g-3
6058.7


(H43.77.97.330#23)
5′-ct gtg tat tac tgt gcg aaa g-3′
6058.7


(H43.77.97.439#44)
5′-ct gtg tat tac tgt gcg aga c-3′
6260.6


(H43.77.97.551#48)
5′-cc atg tat tac tgt gcg aga c-3′
6260.6


(H43.77.97.5a#49)
5′-cc atg tat tAC TGT gcg aga  -3′
5858.3










F.2 Extender and Bridges





XbaI and AflII sites in bridges are bunged


(H43.Y.ABr1)


5′-ggtgtagtaa-



|TCT|AGt|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-




|aac|a

gC|TTt|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
tgt gcg aga-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 160)


(H43.XABr2)


5′-ggtgtagtga-



|TCT|AGt|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-




|aac|a

gC|TTt|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
tgt gcg aaa-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 161)


(H43.XAExt)


5′-ATAgTAgAcT gcAgTgTccT cAgcccTTAA gcTgTTcATc


TgcAAgTAgA-


gAgTATTcTT AgAgTTgTcT cTAgATcAcT AcAcc-3′(SEQ ID NO: 162)


H43.XAExt is the reverse complement of


5′-ggtgtagtga-



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-




|aac|a

gC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
-3′ (SEQ ID NO:



638)


(H43.XAPCR)


5′-ggtgtagtga |TCT|AGA|gac|aac-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 163)


XbaI and AflII sites in bridges are bunged


(H43.ABr1)


5′-ggtgtagtga-



|aac|a

gC|TTt|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
tgt gcg aga-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 164)


(H43.ABr2)


5′-ggtgtagtga-



|aac|a

gC|TTt|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
tgt gcg aaa-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 165)


(H43.AExt)


5′-ATATTAgAcTgcAgTgTccTcAgcccTTAAgcTgTTTcAcTAcAcc-3′


(SEQ ID NO: 166)


(H43.AExt) is the reverse complement of


5′-ggtgtagtga-



|aac|a

gC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat
-3′(SEQ ID NO:



167)


(H43.APCR)


5′-ggtgtagtga |aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|g-3'


(SEQ ID NO: 168)





















Table 5 Analysis of frequency of matching REdaptors in actual V genes





A: HpyCH4V in HC at bases 35-56














Number of mismatches
Number
























Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Cut
Id
Probe





 1
510
5
11
274
92
61
25
22
11
1
3
5
443
6-1

agttctcccTGCAgctgaactc



 2
192
54
42
32
24
15
2
3
10
3
1
6
167
3-11

cactgtatcTGCAaatgaacag



 3
58
19
7
17
6
5
1
0
1
0
2
0
54
3-09
ccctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag


 4
267
42
33
9
8
8
82
43
22
8
11
1
100
5-51

ccgcctaccTGCAgtggagcag



 5
250
111
59
41
24
7
5
1
0
0
2
0
242
3-15

cgctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag



 6
7
0
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
4
0
3
7-4.1
cggcatatcTGCAgatctgcag


 7
7
0
2
2
0
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
4
3-73
cggcgtatcTGCAaatgaacag


 8
26
10
4
1
3
1
2
1
3
1
0
0
19
5-a
ctgcctaccTGCAgtggagcag


 9
21
8
2
3
1
6
1
0
0
0
0
0
20
3-49
tcgcctatcTGCAaatgaacag



1338
249
162
379
149
103
120
71
47
13
23
12
1052

(SEQ ID NO: 169-177,

















respectively,




249
411
790
939

1162

1280

1316



in order of appearance)








1042

1233

1293

1338












Id
Probe
dotted probe





 6-1
agttctcccTGCAgctgaactc
agttctcccTGCAgctgaactc


 3-11
cactgtatcTGCAaatgaacag
cac.g.at.....aa.....ag


 3-09
ccctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag
ccc.g.at.....aa.....ag


 5-51
ccgcctaccTGCAgtggagcag
ccgc..a.......tg..g.ag


 3-15
cgctgtatcTGCAaatgaacag
c.c.g.at.....aa.....ag


 7-4.1
cggcatatcTGCAgatctgcag
c.gca.at......a.ctg.ag


 3-73
cggcgtatcTGCAaatgaacag
c.gcg.at.....aa.....ag


 5-a
ctgoctaccTGCAgtggagcag
ctgc..a.......tg..g.ag


 3-49
togcctatcTGGAaatgaacag
tcgc..at.....aa.....ag










(SEQ ID NO: 169-177, respectively, in order of appearance)


Seqs with the expected RE site only 1004


(Counts only cases with 4 or fewer mismatches)


Seqs with only an unexpected site 0


Seqs with both expected and unexpected 48


(Counts only cases with 4 or fewer mismatches)


Seqs with no sites 0





B: BlpI in HC























Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Ncut
Name






 1
133
73
16
11
13
6
9
1
4
0
119
1-58

acatggaGCTGAGCagcctgag



 2
14
11
1
0
0
0
0
1
0
1
12
1-02
acatggagctgagcaggctgag


 3
34
17
8
2
6
1
0
0
0
0
0
1-18
acatggagctgaggagcctgag


 4
120
50
32
16
10
9
1
1
1
0
2
5-51
acctgcagtggagcagcctgaa


 5
55
13
11
10
17
3
1
0
0
0
0
3-15
atctgcaaatgaacagcctgaa


 6
340
186
88
41
15
6
3
0
1
0
0
3303
atctgcaaatgaacagcctgag


 7
82
25
16
25
12
1
3
0
0
0
0
3-20
atctgcaaatgaacagtctgag


 8
3
0
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
74.1
atctgcagatctgcagcctaaa


 9
23
18
2
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
3-66
atcttcaaatgaacagcctgag


10
2
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3-64
atcttcaaatgggcagcctgag


11
486
249
78
81
38
21
10
4
4
1
467
4301

ccctgaagctgagctctgtgac



12
16
6
3
1
0
1
1
3
1
0
1
6-1
ccctgcagctgaactctgtgac


13
28
15
8
2
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
2-70
tccttacaatgaccaacatgga


14
2
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2-26
tccttaccatgaccaacatgga













601

(SEQ ID NO: 178-191,















respectively in order of appearance)












Name
Full sequence
Dot mode





 1-58
acatggaGCTGAGCagcctgag
acatggaGCTGAGCagcctgag


 1-02
acatggagctgagcaggctgag
................g.....


 1-18
acatggagctgaggagcctgag
.............g........


 5-51
acctgcagtggagcagcctgaa
..c..c..tg...........a


 3-15
atctgcaaatgaacagcctgaa
.tc..c.aa...a........a


 3-30.3
atctgcaaatgaacagcctgag
.tc..c.aa...a......... 


 3-20
atctgcaaatgaacagtctgag
.tc..c.aa...a...t.....


 7-4.1
atctgcagatctgcagcctaaa
.tc..c..a.ct.......a.a


 3-66
atcttcaaatgaacagcctgag
.tc.tc.aa...a.........


 3-64
atcttcaaatgggcagcctgaq
.tc.tc.aa..g..........


 4-30.1
ccctgaagctgagctctgtgac
c.c..a........tctg...c


 6-1
ccctgcagctgaactctgtgac
c.c..c......a.tctg...c


 2-70
tccttacaatgaccaacatgga
t.c.tacaa...c..a.a..ga


 2-26
tccttaccatgaccaacatgga
t.c.tacca...c..a.a..ga










(SEQ ID NO: 178-191, respectively, in order of appearance)


Seqs with the expected RE site only 597 (counting sequences with 4 or fewer mismatches)


Seqs with only an unexpected site 2


Seqs with both expected and unexpected 2


Seqs with no sites 686





C: HpyCH411T, Bst4CI, or TaaI in HC





In scoring whether the RE site of interest is present, only ONs that have 4 or fewer mismatches are counted.


Number of sequences . . . 1617





















Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Ncut

acngt
acngt





 1
244
78
92
43
18
10
1
2
0
0
241
102#1,1

ccgtgtattACTGTgcgagaga

ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaga


 2
457
69
150
115
66
34
11
8
3
1
434
103#2,3

ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaga

.t....................


 3
173
52
45
36
22
14
3
0
0
1
169
108#3

ccgtgtattactgtgcgagagg

.....................g


 4
16
0
3
2
2
1
6
0
1
1
8
124#5,1
ccgtgtattactgtgcaacaga
................a.c...


 5
4
0
0
1
0
1
1
0
1
0
2
145#6
ccatgtattactgtgcaagata
a...............a...t.


 6
15
1
0
1
0
6
4
1
1
1
8
158#8
ccgtgtattactgtgcggcaga
.................gc...


 7
23
4
8
5
2
2
1
1
0
0
21
205#12
ccacatattactgtgcacacag
..aca...........acacag


 8
9
1
1
1
0
3
2
1
0
0
6
226#13
ccacatattactgtgcacggat
..aca...........ac.gat


 9
7
1
3
1
1
o
0
1
0
0
6
270#14
ccacgtattactgtgcacggat
..ac............ac.gat


10
23
7
3
5
5
2
1
0
0
0
22
309#16,
cottgtattactgtgcaaaaga
..t.............a.a...


11
35
5
10
7
6
3
3
0
1
0
31
313#18,
ctgtgtattactgtgcaagaga
.t..............a.....


12
18
2
3
2
2
6
1
0
2
0
15
315#19
ccgtgtattactgtaccacaga
..............a.c.c...


13
3
1
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
320#20
ccttgtatcactgtgcgagaga
..t.....c............. 


14
117
29
23
28
22
8
4
2
1
0
110
323#22

ccgtatattactgtgcgaaaga

....a.............a...


15
75
21
25
13
9
1
4
2
0
0
69
330#23,

ctgtgtattactgtgcgaaaga

.t................a...


16
14
2
2
2
3
0
3
1
1
0
9
349#29
ccgtgtattactgtactagaga
..............a.t.....


17
2
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
372#33
ccgtgtattactgtgctagaga
................t.....


18
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
373#34
ccgtgtattactgtactagaca
..............a.t...c.


19
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0
3d#36
ctgtgtattactgtaagaaaga
.t............aa..a...


20
34
4
9
9
4
5
3
0
0
0
31
428#38
ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaaa
....................a.


21
17
5
4
2
2
3
1
0
0
0
16
4302#40
ccgtgtattactgtgccagaga
................c.....


22
75
15
17
24
7
10
1
1
0
0
73
439#44

ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaca

.t..................c.


23
40
14
15
4
5
1
0
1
0
0
39
551#48

ccatgtattactgtgcgagaca

..a.................c.


24
213
26
56
60
42
20
7
2
0
0
204
5a#49











ccatgtattactgtgcgagaAA ..a.................AA



















Group
337
471
363
218
130
58
23
11
6
(SEQ ID NO: 192-215,


Cumulative
337
808
1171
1389
1519
1577
1600
1611
1617
respectively, in order of












appearance










Seqs with the expected RE site only 1511


Seqs with only an unexpected site 0


Seqs with both expected and unexpected 8


Seqs with no sites 0





Table 5D:





Analysis repeated using only 8 best REdaptors



















Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8+







 1
301
78
101
54
32
16
9
10
1
0
281
102#1







ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaga (SEQ ID NO: 267)



















 2
493
69
155
125
73
37
14
11
3
6
459
103#2







ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaga (SEQ ID NO: 268)



















 3
189
52
45
38
23
18
5
4
1
3
176
108#3







ccgtgtattactgtgcgagagg (SEQ ID NO: 269)



















 4
127
29
23
28
24
10
6
5
2
0
114
323#22







ccatatattactgtgcgaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 270)



















 5
78
21
25
14
li
1
4
2
0
0
72
330#23







ctgtgtattactgtgcgaaaga (SEQ ID NO: 639)



















 6
79
15
17
25
8
11
1
2
0
0
76
439#44







ctatgtattactgtgcgaaaca (SEQ ID NO: 272)



















 7
43
14
15
5
5
3
0
1
0
0
42
551#48







ccatgtattactgtgcgagaca (SEQ ID NO: 273)



















 8
307
26
63
72
51
38
24
14
13
6
250
5a#49







ccatgtattactgtgcgaga (residues 1-20 of SEQ ID NO: 274)













 1
102#1
ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaga
ccgtgtattactgtgcgagaga


 2
103#2
ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaga
.t....................


 3
108#3
ccgtgtattactgtgcgagagg
.....................g


 4
323#22
ccgtatattactgtgogaaaga
....a.............a...


 5
330#23
ctgtgtattactgtgcgaaaga
.t................a...


 6
439#44
ctgtgtattactgtgcgagaca
.t..................c.


 7
551#48
ccatgtattactgtgcgagaca
..a.................c.


 8
5a#49
ccatgtattactgtgcgagaAA
..a.................AA










(SEQ ID NOs: 267-274, respectively, in order of appearance)


Seqs with the expected RE site only 1463 / 1617


Seqs with only an unexpected site 0


Seqs with both expected and unexpected 7


Seqs with no sites 0
















TABLE 6





Human HC GLG FR1 Sequences


VH Exon - Nucleotide sequence alignment







VH1








1-02
CAG GTG CAG CTG GTG CAG TCT GGG GCT GAG GTG AAG AAG CCT GGG GCC TCA GTG AAG GTC



TCC TGC AAG GCT TCT GGA TAC ACC TTC ACC (SEQ ID NO: 216)


1-03
cag gtC cag ctT gtg cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcc tca gtg aag gtT



tcc tgc aag gct tct gga tac acc ttc acT (SEQ ID NO: 217)


1-08
cag gtg cag ctg gtg cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcc tca gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gct tct gga tac acc ttc acc (SEQ ID NO: 218)


1-18
cag gtT cag ctg gtg cag tct ggA gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcc tca gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gct tct ggT tac acc ttT acc (SEQ ID NO: 219)


1-24
cag atC cag ctg gtA cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcc tca gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gTt tcC gga tac acc Ctc acT (SEQ ID NO: 220)


1-45
cag Atg cag ctg gtg cag tct ggg act gag gtg aag aag Act ggg Tcc tca gtg aag gtT



tcc tgc cag gct tcC gga tac acc ttc acc (SEQ ID NO: 221)


1-46
cag gtg cag ctg gtg cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcc tca gtg aag gtT



tcc tgc aaq gcA tct gga tac acc ttc acc (SEQ ID NO: 222)


1-58
caA Atg cag ctg gtg cag tct ggg Cct gag ata aag aag cct ggg Acc tca gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gct tct gga tTc acc ttT acT (SEQ ID NO: 223)


1-69
cag gtg cag ctg gtg cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg Tcc tcG gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gct tct daa GGc acc ttc aGc (SEQ ID NO: 224)


1-e
cag gtg cag cgg gtg cag tct ggg gct gag gtg aag aag cct ggg Tcc tcG gtg aag gtc



tcc tgc aag gct tct aga GGc acc ttc aGc (SEQ ID NO: 225)


1-f
Gag atC cag ctg gtA cag tct ggg act gag gtg aag aag cct ggg gcT Aca gtg aaA Atc



tcc tgc cag gTt tct gga tac acc ttc acc (SEQ ID NO: 226)










VH2








2-05
CAG ATC ACC TTG AAG GAG TCT GGT CCT ACG CTG GTG AAA CCC ACA CAG ACC CTC ACG CTG



ACC TGC ACC TTC TCT GGG TTC TCA CTC AGC (SEQ ID NO: 227)


2-26
cag Gtc acc ttg aag gag tct ggt cct GTg ctg gtg aaa ccc aca Gag acc ctc acg ctg



acc tgc acc Gtc tct ggg ttc tca ctc agc (SEQ ID NO: 228)


2-70
cag Gtc acc tta aag gag tct ggt cct Gcg ctg gtg aaa ccc aca cag acc ctc acA ctg



acc tgc acc ttc tct ggg ttc tca ctc agc (SEQ ID NO: 229)










VH3








3-07
GAG GTG CAG CTG GTG GAG TCT GGG GGA GGC TTG GTC CAG CCT GGG GGG TCC CTG AGA CTC



TCC TGT GCA GCC TCT GGA TTC ACC TTT AGT (SEQ ID NO: 230)


3-09
gaA etg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA cag net ggC Agg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct aga ttc acc ttt GOat (SEQ ID NO: 231)


3-11
Cag atg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtc Aag net ggA ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct aga ttc acc ttC aat (SEQ ID NO: 232)


3-13
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 233)


3-15
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA Aag cct ggg ggg tcc ctT aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acT ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 234)


3-20
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tot ggg gga ggT Gtg gtA cGg cet ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttt Gat (SEQ ID NO: 235)


3-21
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ctg gtc Aag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 236)


3-23
gag gtg cag ctg Ttg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttt agC (SEQ ID NO: 237)


3-30
Gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc Gtg gtc cag cct ggg Agg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 238)


3-30.3
Gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc Gtg gtc cag cct ggg Agg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 239)


3-30.5
tag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc Gtg gtc cag cct ggg Agg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 240)


3-33
Gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc Gtg gtc cag cct ggg Agg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcG tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 241)


3-43
gaA gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga gTc Gtg gtA cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttt Gat (SEQ ID NO: 242)


3-48
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 243)


3-49
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtA cag ccA ggg Cgg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt Aca gcT tct gga ttc acc ttt Ggt (SEQ ID NO: 244)


3-53
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag Act ggA gga ggc ttg Atc cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct ggG ttc acc GtC agt (SEQ ID NO: 245)


3-64
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtc cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 246)


3-66
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtc cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc GtC agt (SEQ ID NO: 247)


3-72
gag gtg oag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtc cag cct ggA ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 248)


3-73
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct ggg gga ggc ttg gtc cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aAa ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct ggG ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 249)


3-74
gag gtg caq ctg gtg gag tcC ggg gga ggc ttA gtT cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc ttC agt (SEQ ID NO: 250)


3-d
gag gtg cag ctg gtg gag tct Cgg gga gTc ttg gtA cag cct ggg ggg tcc ctg aga ctc



tcc tgt gca gcc tct gga ttc acc GtC agt (SEQ ID NO: 251)










VH4








4-04
CAG GTG CAG CTG CAG GAG TCG GGC CCA GGA CTG GTG AAG CCT TCG GGG ACC CTG TCC CTC



ACC TGC GCT GTC TCT GGT GGC TCC ATC AGC (SEQ ID NO: 252)


4-23
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcg gAC acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc gct gtc tct ggt TAc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 253)


4-30.1
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcA CAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 254)


4-30.2 
cag Ctg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc Tca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcA CAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc gct gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 255)


4-30.4
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcA CAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 256)


4-31
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcA CAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 257)


4-34
cag gtg cag ctA cag Cag tGg ggc Gca gga ctg Ttg aag cct tcg gAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc gct gtc tAt qgt ggG tcc Ttc agT (SEQ ID NO: 258)


4-39
cag Ctg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcg gAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 259)


4-59
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcg gAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc atc agT (SEQ ID NO: 260)


4-61
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcg gAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc Act gtc tct ggt ggc tcc Gtc agc (SEQ ID NO: 261)


4-1D
cag gtg cag ctg cag gag tcg ggc cca gga ctg gtg aag cct tcg gAg acc ctg tcc ctc



acc tgc gct gtc tct ggt TAc tcc atc agc (SEQ ID NO: 262)










VH5








5-51
GAG GTG CAG CTG GTG CAG TCT GGA GCA GAG GTG AAA AAG CCC GGG GAG TCT CTG AAG ATC



TCC TGT AAG GGT TCT GGA TAC AGC TTT ACC (SEQ ID NO: 263)


5-a
gaA gtg cag ctg gtg Gag tct gga gca gag gtg aaa aag ccc ggg gag tct ctg aGg atc



tcc tgt aag ggt tct gga tac agc ttt acc (SEQ ID NO: 264)










VH6








6-1
CAG GTA CAG CTG CAG CAG TCA GGT CCA GGA CTG GTG AAG CCC TCG CAG ACC CTC TCA CTC



ACC TGT GCC ATC TCC GGG GAC AGT GTG TCT (SEQ ID NO: 265)










VH7








7-4.1
CAG GTG CAG CTG GTG CAA TCT GGG TCT GAG TTG AAG AAG CCT GGG GCC TCA GTG AAG GTT



TCC TGC AAG GCT TCT GGA TAC ACC TTC ACT (SEQ ID NO: 266)
















TABLE 7





RERS sites in Human HC GLG FR1s where there are at least 20 GLGs cut


















BsgI GTGCAG
71 (cuts 16/14 bases to right)
















 1: 4
 1: 13
 2: 13
 3: 4
 3: 13
 4: 13




 6: 13
 7: 4
 7: 13
 8: 13
 9: 4
 9: 13


10: 4
10: 13
15: 4
15: 65
16: 4
16: 65


17: 4
17: 65
18: 4
18: 65
19: 4
19: 65


20: 4
20: 65
21: 4
21: 65
22: 4
22: 65


23: 4
23: 65
24: 4
24: 65
25: 4
25: 65


26: 4
26: 65
27: 4
27: 65
28: 4
28: 65


29: 4
30: 4
30: 65
31: 4
31: 65
32: 4


32: 65
33: 4
33: 65
34: 4
34: 65
35: 4


35: 65
36: 4
36: 65
37: 4
38: 4
39: 4


41: 4
42: 4
43: 4
45: 4
46: 4
47: 4


48: 4
48: 13
49: 4
49: 13
51: 4








There are 39 hits at base# 4



There are 21 hits at base# 65













-″- ctgcac

 9


















12: 63
13: 63
14: 63
39: 63
41: 63
42: 63




44: 63
45: 63
46: 63













BbvI GCAGC

65


















 1: 6
 3: 6
 6: 6
 7: 6
 8: 6
 9: 6




10: 6
15: 6
15: 67
16: 6
16: 67
17: 6


17: 67
18: 6
18: 67
19: 6
19: 67
20: 6


20: 67
21: 6
21: 67
22: 6
22: 67
23: 6


23: 67
24: 6
24: 67
25: 6
25: 67
26: 6


26: 67
27: 6
27: 67
28: 6
28: 67
29: 6


30: 6
30: 67
31: 6
31: 67
32: 6
32: 67


33: 6
33: 67
34: 6
34: 67
35: 6
35: 67


36: 6
36: 67

37: 6


38: 6


39: 6


40: 6




41: 6


42: 6

43: 6

44: 6


45: 6


46: 6




47: 6

48: 6
49: 6

50: 12

51: 6








There are 43 hits at base#




6 Bolded sites very near sites listed below



There are 21 hits at base# 67













-″- gctgc

13



















37: 9


38: 9


39: 9


40: 3


40: 9


41: 9






42: 9


44: 3


44: 9


45: 9


46: 9


47: 9




50: 9









There are 11 hits at base# 9














BsoFI GCngc

78


















 1: 6
 3: 6
 6: 6
 7: 6
 8: 6
 9: 6




10: 6
15: 6
15: 67
16: 6
16: 67
17: 6


17: 67
18: 6
18: 67
19: 6
19: 67
20: 6


20: 67
21: 6
21: 67
22: 6
22: 67
23: 6


23: 67
24: 6
24: 67
25: 6
25: 67
26: 6


26: 67
27: 6
27: 67
28: 6
28: 67
29: 6


30: 6
30: 67
31: 6
31: 67
32: 6
32: 67


33: 6
33: 67
39: 6
34: 67
35: 6
35: 67


36: 6
36: 67
37: 6
37: 9
38: 6
38: 9


39: 6
39: 9
40: 3
40: 6
40: 9
41: 6


41: 9
42: 6
42: 9
43: 6
44: 3
44: 6


44: 9
45: 6
45: 9
46: 6
46: 9
47: 6


47: 9
48: 6
49: 6
50: 9
50: 12
51: 6








There are 43 hits at base# 6 These often occur together.




There are 11 hits at base# 9



There are 2 hits at base# 3


There are 21 hits at base# 67













TseI Gcwg

78


















 1: 6
 3: 6
 6: 6
 7: 6
 8: 6
 9: 6




10: 6
15: 6
15: 67
16: 6
16: 67
17: 6


17: 67
18: 6
18: 67
19: 6
19: 67
20: 6


20: 67
21: 6
21: 67
22: 6
22: 67
23: 6


23: 67
24: 6
24: 67
25: 6
25: 67
26: 6


26: 67
27: 6
27: 67
28: 6
28: 67
29: 6


30: 6
30: 67
31: 6
31: 67
32: 6
32: 67


33: 6
33: 67
34: 6
34: 67
35: 6
35: 67


36: 6
36: 67
37: 6
37: 9
38: 6
38: 9


39: 6
39: 9
40: 3
40: 6
40: 9
41: 6


41: 9
42: 6
42: 9
43: 6
44: 3
44: 6


44: 9
45: 6
45: 9
46: 6
46: 9
47: 6


47: 9
48: 6
49: 6
50: 9
50: 12
51: 6








There are 43 hits at base# 6 Often together.




There are 11 hits at base# 9




There are 2 hits at base# 3




There are 1 hits at base# 12



There are 21 hits at base# 67













MspA1I CMGckg

48


















 1: 7
 3: 7
 4: 7
 5: 7
 6: 7
 7: 7




 8: 7
 9: 7
10: 7
11: 7
15: 7
16: 7


17: 7
18: 7
19: 7
20: 7
21: 7
22: 7


23: 7
24: 7
25: 7
26: 7
27: 7
28: 7


29: 7
30: 7
31: 7
32: 7
33: 7
34 : 7


35: 7
36: 7
37: 7
38: 7
39: 7
40: 1


40: 7
41: 7
42: 7
44: 1
44: 7
45: 7


46: 7
47: 7
48: 7
49: 7
50: 7
51: 7








There are 46 hits at base# 7















PvuII CAGctg



48



















1: 7
3: 7
4: 7
5: 7
6: 7
7: 7




8: 7
9: 7

10: 7


11: 7


15: 7


16: 7




17: 7


18: 7


19: 7


20: 7


21: 7


22:: 7




23: 7


24: 7


25: 7


26: 7


27: 7


28: 7




29: 7


30: 7


31: 7


32: 7


33: 7


34: 7




35: 7


36: 7


37: 7


38: 7


39: 7


40: 1




40: 7


41: 7


42: 7


44
: 1


44: 7


45: 7




46: 7


47: 7


48: 7


49: 7


50: 7


51: 7









There are 46 hits at base# 7




There are 2 hits at base# 1















AluI AGct



54



















 1: 8
 2: 8
 3: 8
 4: 8
 4: 24
 5: 8




 6: 8
 7: 8
 8: 8
 9: 8
10: 8
11: 8


15: 8
16: 8
17: 8
18: 8
19: 8
20: 8


21: 8
22: 8
23: 8
24: 8
25: 8
26: 8


27: 8
28: 8
29: 8
29: 69
30: 8
31: 8


32: 8
33: 8
34: 8
35: 8
36: 8
37: 8


38: 8
39: 8
40: 2
40: 8
41: 8
42: 8


43: 8
44: 2
44: 8
45: 8
46: 8
47: 8


48: 8
48: 82
49: 8
49: 82
50: 8
51: 8








There are 48 hits at base# 8



There are 2 hits at base# 2













DdeI Ctnag

48


















 1: 26
 1: 48
 2: 26
 2: 48
 3: 26
 3: 48




 4: 26
 4: 48
 5: 26
 5: 48
 6: 26
 6: 48


 7: 26
 7: 48
 8: 26
 8: 48
 9: 26
10: 26


11: 26
12: 85
13: 85
14: 85
15: 52
16: 52


17: 52
18: 52
19: 52
20: 52
21: 52
22: 52


23: 52
24: 52
25: 52
26: 52
27: 52
28: 52


29: 52
30: 52
31: 52
32: 52
33: 52
35: 30


35: 52
36: 52
40: 24
49: 52
51: 26
51: 48








There are 22 hits at base# 52 52 and 48 never together.



There are 9 hits at base# 48


There are 12 hits at base# 26 26 and 24 never together.













HphI tcacc

42


















 1: 86
 3: 86
 6: 86
 7: 86
 8: 80
11: 86




12: 5
13: 5
14: 5
15: 80
16: 80
17: 80


18: 80
20: 80
21: 80
22: 80
23: 80
24: 80


25: 80
26: 80
27: 80
28: 80
29: 80
30: 80


31: 80
32: 80
33: 80
34: 80
35: 80
36: 80


37: 59
38: 59
39: 59
40: 59
41: 59
42: 59


43: 59
44 59
45: 59
46: 59
47: 59
50: 59







There are 22 hits at base# 80 80 and 86 never together



There are 5 hits at base# 86



There are 12 hits at base# 59













BssKI Nccngg

50


















 1: 39
 2: 39
 3: 39
 4: 39
 5: 39
 7: 39




 8: 39
 9: 39
10: 39
11: 39
15: 39
16: 39


17: 39
18: 39
19: 39
20: 39
21: 29
21: 39


22: 39
23: 39
24: 39
25: 39
26: 39
27: 39


28: 39
29: 39
30: 39
31: 39
32: 39
33: 39


34: 39
35: 19
35: 39
36: 39
37: 24
38: 24


39: 24
41: 24
42: 24
44: 24
45: 24
46: 24


47: 24
48: 39
48: 40
49: 39
49: 40
50: 24


50: 73
51: 39








There are 35 hits at base# 39 39 and 40 together twice.



There are 2 hits at base# 40













BsaJI Ccnngg

47


















 1: 40
 2: 40
 3: 40
 4: 40
 5: 40
 7: 40




 8: 40
 9: 40
 9: 47
10: 40
10: 47
11: 40


15: 40
18: 40
19: 40
20: 40
21: 40
22: 40


23: 40
24: 40
25: 40
26: 40
27: 40
28: 40


29: 40
30: 40
31: 40
32: 40
34: 40
35: 20


35: 40
36: 40
37: 24
38: 24
39: 24
41: 24


42: 24
44: 24
45: 24
46: 24
47: 24
48: 40


48: 41
49: 40
49: 41
50: 74
51: 40








There are 32 hits at base# 40 40 and 41 together twice




There are 2 hits at base# 41



There are 9 hits at base# 24



There are 2 hits at base# 47














BstNI CCwgg

44






PspGI ccwgg












ScrFI($M.HpaII) CCwgg



















 1: 40
 2: 40
 3: 40
 4: 40
 5: 40
 7: 40




 8: 40
 9: 40
10: 40
11: 40
15: 40
16: 40


17: 40
18: 40
19: 40
20: 40
21: 30
21: 40


22: 40
23: 40
24: 40
25: 40
26: 40
27: 40


28: 40
29: 40
30: 40
31: 40
32: 40
33: 40


34: 40
35: 40
36: 40
37: 25
38: 25
39: 25


41: 25
42: 25
44: 25
45: 25
46: 25
47: 25


50: 25
51: 40








There are 33 hits at base# 40














ScrFI CCngg

50


















 1: 40
 2: 40
 3: 40
 4: 40
 5: 40
 7: 40




 8: 40
 9: 40
10: 40
11: 40
15: 40
16: 40


17: 40
18: 40
19: 40
20: 40
21: 30
21: 40


22: 40
23: 40
24: 40
25: 40
26: 40
27: 40


28: 40
29: 40
30: 40
31: 40
32: 40
33: 40


34: 40
35: 20
35: 40
36: 40
37: 25
38: 25


39: 25
41: 25
42: 25
44: 25
45: 25
46: 25


47: 25
48: 40
48: 41
49: 90
49: 41
50: 25


50: 74
51: 40








There are 35 hits at base# 40




There are 2 hits at base# 41














EcoO109I RGgnccy

34


















 1: 43
 2: 43
 4: 43
 4: 43
 5: 43
 6: 43




 7: 43
 8: 43
 9: 43
10: 43
15: 46
16: 46


17: 46
18: 46
19: 46
20: 46
21: 46
22: 46


23: 46
24: 46
25: 46
26: 46
27: 46
28: 46


30: 46
31: 46
32: 46
33: 46
34: 46
35: 46


36: 46
37: 46
43: 79
51: 43








There are 22 hits at base# 46 46 and 43 never together



There are 11 hits at base# 43













NlaIV GGNncc

71


















 1: 43
 2: 43
 3: 43
 4: 43
 5: 43
 6: 43




 7: 43
 8: 43
 9: 43
 9: 79
10: 43
10: 79


15: 46
15: 47
16: 47
17: 46
17: 47
18: 46


18: 47
19: 46
19: 47
20: 46
20: 47
21: 46


21: 47
22: 46
22: 47
23: 47
24: 47
25: 47


26: 47
27: 46
27: 47
28: 46
28: 47
29: 47


30: 46
30: 47
31: 46
31: 47
32: 46
32: 47


33: 46
33: 47
34: 46
34: 47
35: 46
35: 47


36: 46
36: 47
37: 21
37: 46
37: 47
37: 79


38: 21
39: 21
39: 79
40: 79
41: 21
41: 79


42: 21
42: 79
43: 79
44: 21
44: 79
45: 21


45: 79
46: 21
46: 79
47: 21
51: 43








There are 23 hits at base# 47 46 & 47 often together




There are 17 hits at base# 46 There are 11 hits at base# 43














Sau96I Ggncc

70


















 1: 44
 2: 3
 2: 44
 3: 44
 4: 44
 5: 3
 5: 44
 6: 44


 7: 44
 8: 22
 8: 44
 9: 44
10: 44
11: 3
12: 22
13: 22


14: 22
15: 33
15: 47
16: 47
17: 47
18: 47
19: 47
20: 47


21: 47
22: 47
23: 33
23: 47
24: 33
24: 47
25: 33
25: 47


26: 33
26: 47
27: 47
28: 47
29: 47
30: 47
31: 33
31: 47


32: 33
32: 47
33: 33
33: 47
34: 33
34: 47
35: 47
36: 47


37: 21
37: 22
37: 47
38: 21
38: 22
39: 21
39: 22
41: 21


41: 22
42: 21
42: 22
43: 80
44: 21
44: 22
45: 21
45: 22


46: 21
46: 22
47: 21
47: 22
50: 22
51: 44








There are 23 hits at base# 47 These do not occur together.




There are 11 hits at base# 44



There are 14 hits at base# 22 These do occur together.


There are 9 hits at base# 21














(SEQ ID NO: 13)




















BsmAI GTCTCNnnnn

22


















 1: 58
 3: 58
 4: 58
 5: 58
 8: 58
 9: 58




10: 58
13: 70
36: 18
37: 70
38: 70
39: 70


40: 70
41: 70
42: 70
44: 70
45: 70
46: 70


47: 70
48: 48
49: 48
50: 85







There are 11 hits at base# 70













(SEQ ID NO: 14)








-″- Nnnnnngagac

27














13: 40
15: 48
16: 48
17: 48
18: 48
20: 48




21: 48
22: 48
23: 48
24: 48
25: 48
26: 48


27: 48
28: 48
29: 48
30: 10
30: 48
31: 48


32: 48
33: 48
35: 48
36: 48
43: 40
44: 40


45: 40
46: 40
47: 40








There are 20 hits at base# 48














AvaII Ggwcc

44
















Sau96I($M.HaeIII) Ggwcc
44


















 2: 3
 5: 3
 6: 44
 8: 44
 9: 44
10: 44




11: 3
12: 22
13: 22
14: 22
15: 33
15: 47


16: 47
17: 47
18: 47
19: 47
20: 47
21: 47


22: 47
23: 33
23: 47
24: 33
29: 47
25: 33


25: 47
26: 33
26: 47
27: 47
28: 47
29: 47


30: 47
31: 33
31: 47
32: 33
32: 47
33: 33


33: 47
34: 33
34: 47
35: 47
36: 47
37: 47


43: 80
50: 22







There are 23 hits at base# 47 44 & 47 never together


There are 4 hits at base# 44













PpuMI RGgwccy

27


















 6: 43
 8: 43
 9: 43
10: 43
15: 46
16: 46




17: 46
18: 46
19: 46
20: 46
21: 46
22: 46


23: 46
24: 46
25: 46
26: 46
27: 46
28: 46


30: 46
31: 46
32: 46
33: 46
34: 46
35: 46


36: 46
37: 46
43: 79








There are 22 hits at base# 46 43 and 46 never occur together.



There are 4 hits at base# 43













BsmFI GGGAC

 3


















 8: 43
37: 46
50: 77


















-″- gtccc

33


















15: 48
16: 48
17: 48
 1: 0
 1: 0
20: 48




21: 48
22: 48
23: 48
29: 48
25: 48
26: 48


27: 48
28: 48
29: 48
30: 48
31: 48
32: 48


33: 48
34: 48
35: 48
36: 48
37: 54
38: 54


39: 54
40: 54
41: 54
42: 54
43: 54
44: 54


45: 54
46: 54
47: 54








There are 20 hits at base# 48




There are 11 hits at base# 54















HinfI Gantc



80



















8: 77

12: 16


13: 16


14: 16


15: 16


15: 56






15: 77


16: 16


16: 56


16: 77


17: 16


17: 56




17: 77


18: 16


18: 56


18: 77


19: 16


19: 56




19: 77


20: 16


20: 56


20: 77


21: 16


21: 56




21: 77


22: 16


22: 56


22: 77


23: 16


23: 56




23: 77


24: 16


24: 56


24: 77


25: 16


25: 56




25: 77


26: 16


26: 56


26: 77


27: 16


27: 26




27: 56


27: 77


28: 16


28: 56


28: 77


29: 16




29: 56


29: 77


30: 56


31: 16


31: 56


31: 77




32: 16


32: 56


32: 77


33: 16


33: 56


33: 77




34: 16


35: 16


35: 56


35: 77


36: 16


36: 26




36: 56


36: 77


37: 16


38: 16


39: 16


40: 16




41: 16


42: 16


44: 16


45: 16


46: 16


47: 16




48: 46


49: 46









There are 34 hits at base# 16















TfiI Gawtc



21



















8: 77

15: 77


16: 77


17: 77


18: 77


19: 77






20: 77


21: 77


22: 77


23: 77


24: 77


25: 77




26: 77


27: 77


28: 77


29: 77


31: 77


32: 77




33: 77


35: 77


36: 77









There are 21 hits at base# 77














MlyI GAGTC

38


















12: 16
13: 16
14: 16
15: 16
16: 16
17: 16




18: 16
19: 16
20: 16
21: 16
22: 16
23: 16


24: 16
25: 16
26: 16
27: 16
27: 26
28: 16


29: 16
31: 16
32: 16
33: 16
34: 16
35: 16


36: 16
36: 26
37: 16
38: 16
39: 16
40: 16


41: 16
42: 16
44: 16
45: 16
46: 16
47: 16


48: 46
49: 46








There are 34 hits at base# 16














-″- GACTC

21


















15: 56
16: 56
17: 56
18: 56
19: 56
20: 56




21: 56
22: 56
23: 56
24: 56
25: 56
26: 56


27: 56
28: 56
29: 56
30: 56
31: 56
32: 56


33: 56
35: 56
36: 56








There are 21 hits at base# 56














PleI gagtc

38


















12: 16
13: 16
14: 16
15: 16
16: 16
17: 16




18: 16
19: 16
20: 16
21: 16
22: 16
23: 16


24: 16
25: 16
26: 16
27: 16
27: 26
28: 16


29: 16
31: 16
32: 16
33: 16
34: 16
35: 16


36: 16
36: 26
37: 16
38: 16
39: 16
40: 16


41: 16
42: 16
44: 16
45: 16
46: 16
47: 16


48: 46
49: 46








There are 34 hits at base# 16














-″- gactc

21


















15: 56
16: 56
17: 56
18: 56
19: 56
20: 56




21: 56
22: 56
23: 56
24: 56
25: 56
26: 56


27: 56
28: 56
29: 56
30: 56
31: 56
32: 56


33: 56
35: 56
36: 56








There are 21 hits at base# 56














AlwNI CAGNNNctg

26


















15: 68
16: 68
17: 68
18: 68
19: 68
20: 68




21: 68
22: 68
23: 68
24: 68
25: 68
26: 68


27: 68
28: 68
29: 68
30: 68
31: 68
32: 68


33: 68
34: 68
35: 68
36: 68
39: 46
40: 46


41: 46
42: 46








There are 22 hits at base# 68

















TABLE 8





Kappa FR1 GLGs


















!
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11 12





GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT







!
13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23





GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
O12
(SEQ ID NO: 275)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
O2
(SEQ ID NO: 276)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
O18
(SEQ ID NO: 277)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
O8
(SEQ ID NO: 278)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
A20
(SEQ ID NO: 279)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
A30
(SEQ ID NO: 280)



AAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCT GCC ATG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L14
(SEQ ID NO: 281)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCA CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L1
(SEQ ID NO: 282)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCA CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L15
(SEQ ID NO: 283)



GCC ATC CAG TTG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L4
(SEQ ID NO: 284)



GCC ATC CAG TTG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L18
(SEQ ID NO: 285)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCT TCC GTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L5
(SEQ ID NO: 286)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCT TCT GTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L19
(SEQ ID NO: 287)



GAC ATC CAG TTG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TTC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L8
(SEQ ID NO: 288)



GCC ATC CGG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TTC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L23
(SEQ ID NO: 289)



GCC ATC CGG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCA TTC TCT








GCA TCT ACA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGT  !
L9
(SEQ ID NO: 290)



GTC ATC TGG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TTA CTC TCT








GCA TCT ACA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC AGT TGT  !
L24
(SEQ ID NO: 291)



GCC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA TCC TCC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L11
(SEQ ID NO: 292)



GAC ATC CAG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCT TCC ACC CTG TCT








GCA TCT GTA GGA GAC AGA GTC ACC ATC ACT TGC  !
L12
(SEQ ID NO: 293)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACC CAG ACT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA GAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
O11
(SEQ ID NO: 294)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACC CAG ACT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA GAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
O1
(SEQ ID NO: 295)



GAT GTT GTG ATG ACT CAG TCT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CTT GGA CAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A17
(SEQ ID NO: 296)



GAT GTT GTG ATG ACT CAG TCT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CTT GGA CAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A1
(SEQ ID NO: 297)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACC CAG ACT CCA CTC TCT CTG TCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA CAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A18
(SEQ ID NO: 298)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACC CAG ACT CCA CTC TCT CTG TCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA CAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A2
(SEQ ID NO: 299)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACT CAG TCT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA GAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A19
(SEQ ID NO: 300)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACT CAG TCT CCA CTC TCC CTG CCC








GTC ACC CCT GGA GAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A3
(SEQ ID NO: 301)



GAT ATT GTG ATG ACC CAG ACT CCA CTC TCC TCA CCT








GTC ACC CTT GGA CAG CCG GCC TCC ATC TCC TGC  !
A23
(SEQ ID NO: 302)



GAA ATT GTG TTG ACG CAG TCT CCA GGC ACC CTG TCT








TTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
A27
(SEQ ID NO: 303)



GAA ATT GTG TTG ACG CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








TTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
A11
(SEQ ID NO: 304)



GAA ATA GTG ATG ACG CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








GTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
L2
(SEQ ID NO: 305)



GAA ATA GTG ATG ACG CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








GTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
L16
(SEQ ID NO: 306)



GAA ATT GTG TTG ACA CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








TTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
L6
(SEQ ID NO: 307)



GAA ATT GTG TTG ACA CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








TTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
L20
(SEQ ID NO: 308)



GAA ATT GTA ATG ACA CAG TCT CCA GCC ACC CTG TCT








TTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !
L25
(SEQ ID NO: 309)



GAC ATC GTG ATG ACC CAG TCT CCA GAC TCC CTG GCT








GTG TCT CTG GGC GAG AGG GCC ACC ATC AAC TGC  !
B3
(SEQ ID NO: 310)



GAA ACG ACA CTC ACG CAG TCT CCA GCA TTC ATG TCA








GCG ACT CCA GGA GAC AAA GTC AAC ATC TCC TGC  !
B2
(SEQ ID NO: 311)



GAA ATT GTG CTG ACT CAG TCT CCA GAC TTT CAG TCT








GTG ACT CCA AAG GAG AAA GTC ACC ATC ACC TGC  !
A26
(SEQ ID NO: 312)



GAA ATT GTG CTG ACT CAG TCT CCA GAC TTT CAG TCT








GTG ACT CCA AAG GAG AAA GTC ACC ATC ACC TGC  !
A10
(SEQ ID NO: 313)



GAT GTT GTG ATG ACA CAG TCT CCA GCT TTC CTC TCT








GTG ACT CCA GGG GAG AAA GTC ACC ATC ACC TGC  !
A14
(SEQ ID NO: 314)






























TABLE 10





Lambda FR1 GLG sequences
















! VL1
CAG TCT GTG CTG ACT CAG CCA CCC TCG GTG TCT GAA



GCC CCC AGG CAG AGG GTC ACC ATC TCC TGT ! 1a



(SEQ ID NO: 315)



cag tct gtg ctg acG cag ccG ccc tcA gtg tct gGG



gcc ccA Ggg cag agg gtc acc atc tcc tgC ! 1e



(SEQ ID NO: 316)



cag tct gtg ctg act cag cca ccc tcA gCg tct gGG



Acc ccc Ggg cag agg gtc acc atc tcT tgt ! 1c



(SEQ ID NO: 317)



cag tct gtg ctg act cag cca ccc tcA gCg tct gGG



Acc ccc Ggg cag agg gtc acc atc tcT tgt ! 1g



(SEQ ID NO: 318)





! VL2
cag tct gtg Ttg acG cag ccG ccc tcA gtg tct gCG



gcc ccA GgA cag aAg gtc acc atc tcc tgC ! 1b



(SEQ ID NO: 319)



CAG TCT GCC CTG ACT CAG CCT CCC TCC GCG TCC GGG



TCT CCT GGA CAG TCA GTC ACC ATC TCC TGC ! 2c



(SEQ ID NO: 320)



cag tct gcc ctg act cag cct cGc tcA gTg tcc gg



tct cct gga cag tca gtc acc atc tcc tgc! 2e



(SEQ ID NO: 321)



cag tct gcc ctg act cag cct Gcc tcc gTg tcT gg



tct cct gga cag tcG Atc acc atc tcc tgc ! 2a2



(SEQ ID NO: 322)



cag tct gcc ctg act cag cct ccc tcc gTg tcc ggg



tct cct gga cag tca gtc acc atc tcc tgc ! 2d



(SEQ ID NO: 323)





! VL3
cag tct gcc ctg act cag cct Gcc tcc gTg tcT ggg



tct cct gga cag tcG Atc acc atc tcc tgc ! 2b2



(SEQ ID NO: 324)



TCC TAT GAG CTG ACT CAG CCA CCC TCA GTG TCC GTG



TCC CCA GGA CAG ACA GCC AGC ATC ACC TGC! 3r



(SEQ ID NO: 325)



tcc tat gag ctg act cag cca cTc tca gtg tcA gtg



Gcc cTG gga cag acG gcc agG atT acc tgT ! 3j



(SEQ ID NO: 326)



tcc tat gag ctg acA cag cca ccc tcG gtg tcA gtg



tcc cca gga caA acG gcc agG atc acc tgc! 3p



(SEQ ID NO: 327)



tcc tat gag ctg acA cag cca ccc tcG gtg tcA gtg



tcc cTa gga cag aTG gcc agG atc acc tgc ! 3a



(SEQ ID NO: 328)



tcT tCt gag ctg act cag GAC ccT GcT gtg tcT gtg



Gcc TTG gga cag aca gTc agG atc acA tgc ! 3l



(SEQ ID NO: 329)



tcc tat gTg ctg act cag cca ccc tca gtg tcA gtg



Gcc cca gga Aag acG gcc agG atT acc tgT ! 3h



(SEQ ID NO: 330)



tcc tat gag ctg acA cag cTa ccc tcG gtg tcA gtg



tcc cca gga cag aca gcc agG atc acc tgc ! 3e



(SEQ ID NO: 331)



tcc tat gag ctg aTG cag cca ccc tcG gtg tcA gtg



tcc cca gga cag acG gcc agG atc acc tgc ! 3m



(SEQ ID NO: 332)





! VL4
tcc tat gag ctg acA cag cca Tcc tca gtg tcA gtg



tcT ccG gga cag aca gcc agG atc acc tgc ! V2-19



(SEQ ID NO: 333)



CTG CCT GTG CTG ACT CAG CCC CCG TCT GCA TCT GCC



TTG CTG GGA GCC TCG ATC AAG CTC ACC TGC ! 4e



(SEQ ID NO: 334)



cAg cct gtg ctg act caA TcA TcC tct gcC tct gcT



tcc ctg gga Tcc tcg Gtc aag ctc acc tgc ! 4a



(SEQ ID NO: 335)





! VL5
cAg cTt gtg ctg act caA TcG ccC tct gcC tct gcc



tCC ctg gga gcc tcg Gtc aag ctc acc tgc ! 4b



(SEQ ID NO: 336)



CAG CCT GTG CTG ACT CAG CCA CCT TCC TCC TCC GCA



TCT CCT GGA GAA TCC GCC AGA CTC ACC TGC ! 5e



(SEQ ID NO: 337)



cag Gct gtg ctg act cag ccG Gct tcc CTc tcT gca



tct cct gga gCa tcA gcc agT ctc acc tgc ! 5c



(SEQ ID NO: 338)


! VL6
cag cct gtg ctg act cag cca Tct tcc CAT tcT gca



tct Tct gga gCa tcA gTc aga ctc acc tgc ! 5b



(SEQ ID NO: 339)





! VL7
AAT TTT ATG CTG ACT CAG CCC CAC TCT GTG TCG GAG



TCT CCG GGG AAG ACG GTA ACC ATC TCC TGC ! 6a



(SEQ ID NO: 340)



CAG ACT GTG GTG ACT CAG GAG CCC TCA CTG ACT GTG



TCC CCA GGA GGG ACA GTC ACT CTC ACC TGT ! 7a



(SEQ ID NO: 341)


! VL8
cag Gct gtg gtg act cag gag ccc tca ctg act gtg



tcc cca gga ggg aca gtc act ctc acc tgt ! 7b



(SEQ ID NO: 342)





! VL9
CAG ACT GTG GTG ACC CAG GAG CCA TCG TTC TCA GTG



TCC CCT GGA GGG ACA GTC ACA CTC ACT TGT ! 8a



(SEQ ID NO: 343)





! VL10
CAG CCT GTG CTG ACT CAG CCA CCT TCT GCA TCA GCC



TCC CTG GGA GCC TCG GTC ACA CTC ACC TGC ! 9a



(SEQ ID NO: 344)



CAG GCA GGG CTG ACT CAG CCA CCC TCG GTG TCC AAG



GGC TTG AGA CAG ACC GCC ACA CTC ACC TGC ! 10a



(SEQ ID NO: 345)
















TABLE 11





RERSs found in human lambda FR1 GLGs















! There are 31 lambda GLGs









MlyI NnnnnnGACTC (SEQ ID NO: 346)

25












 1: 6
 3: 6
 4: 6
 6: 6
 7: 6
 8: 6


 9: 6
10: 6
11: 6
12: 6
15: 6
16: 6


20: 6
21: 6
22: 6
23: 6
23: 50
24: 6


25: 6
25: 50
26: 6
27: 6
28: 6
30: 6


31: 6







There are 23 hits at base# 6









-″- GAGTCNNNNNn (SEQ ID NO: 347)
 1













26: 34














MwoI GCNNNNNnngc (SEQ ID NO: 348)
20













 1: 9
 2: 9
 3: 9
 4: 9
11: 9
11: 56


12: 9
13: 9
14: 9
16: 9
17: 9
18: 9


19: 9
20: 9
23: 9
24: 9
25: 9
26: 9


30: 9
31: 9







There are 19 hits at base# 9











HinfI Gantc

27














 1: 12
 3: 12
 4: 12
 6: 12
 7: 12
 8: 12


 9: 12
10: 12
11: 12
12: 12
15: 12
16: 12


20: 12
21: 12
22: 12
23: 12
23: 46
23: 56


24: 12
25: 12
25: 56
26: 12
26: 34
27: 12


28: 12
30: 12
31: 12







There are 23 hits at base# 12











PleI gactc

25














 1: 12
 3: 12
 4: 12
 6: 12
 7: 12
 8: 12


 9: 12
10: 12
11: 12
12: 12
15: 12
16: 12


20: 12
21: 12
22: 12
23: 12
23: 56
24: 12


25: 12
25: 56
26: 12
27: 12
28: 12
30: 12


31: 12







There are 23 hits at base# 12











-″- gagtc

 1














26: 34
















DdeI Ctnag

32














 1: 14
 2: 24
 3: 14
 3: 24
 4: 14
 4: 24


 5: 24
 6: 14
 7: 14
 7: 24
 8: 14
 9: 14


10: 14
11: 14
11: 24
12: 14
12: 24
15: 5


15: 14
16: 14
16: 24
19: 24
20: 14
23: 14


24: 14
25: 14
26: 14
27: 14
28: 14
29: 30


30: 14
31: 14







There are 21 hits at base# 14











BsaJI Ccnngg

38














 1: 23
 1: 40
 2: 39
 2: 40
 3: 39
 3: 40


 4: 39
 4: 40
 5: 39
11: 39
12: 38
12: 39


13: 23
13: 39
14: 23
14: 39
15: 38
16: 39


17: 23
17: 39
18: 23
18: 39
21: 38
21: 39


21: 47
22: 38
22: 39
22: 47
26: 40
27: 39


28: 39
29: 14
29: 39
30: 38
30: 39
30: 47


31: 23
31: 32







There are 17 hits at base# 39



There are 5 hits at base# 38




There are 5 hits at base# 40 Makes cleavage ragged.












MnlI cctc

35














 1: 23
 2: 23
 3: 23
 4: 23
 5: 23
 6: 19


 6: 23
 7: 19
 8: 23
 9: 19
 9: 23
10: 23


11: 23
13: 23
14: 23
16: 23
17: 23
18: 23


19: 23
20: 47
21: 23
21: 29
21: 47
22: 23


22: 29
22: 35
22: 47
23: 26
23: 29
24: 27


27: 23
28: 23
30: 35
30: 47
31: 23







There are 21 hits at base# 23



There are 3 hits at base# 19




There are 3 hits at base# 29




There are 1 hits at base# 26




There are 1 hits at base# 27 These could make cleavage ragged.












-″- gagg

 7














 1: 48
 2: 48
 3: 48
 4: 48
27: 44
28: 44


29: 44











BssKI Nccngg

39














 1: 40
 2: 39
 3: 39
 3: 40
 4: 39
 4: 40


 5: 39
 6: 31
 6: 39
 7: 31
 7: 39
 8: 39


 9: 31
 9: 39
10: 39
11: 39
12: 38
12: 52


13: 39
13: 52
14: 52
16: 39
16: 52
17: 39


17: 52
18: 39
18: 52
19: 39
19: 52
21: 38


22: 38
23: 39
24: 39
26: 39
27: 39
28: 39


29: 14
29: 39
30: 38







There are 21 hits at base# 39



There are 4 hits at base# 38




There are 3 hits at base# 31




There are 3 hits at base# 40 Ragged












BstNI CCwgg

30














 1: 91
 2: 40
 5: 40
 6: 40
 7: 40
 8: 40


 9: 40
10: 40
11: 40
12: 39
12: 53
13: 40


13: 53
14: 53
16: 40
16: 53
17: 40
17: 53


18: 40
18: 53
19: 53
21: 39
22: 39
23: 40


24: 40
27: 40
28: 40
29: 15
29: 40
30: 39







There are 17 hits at base# 40



There are 7 hits at base# 53




There are 4 hits at base# 39




There are 1 hits at base# 41 Ragged












PspGI ccwgg

30














 1: 41
 2: 40
 5: 40
 6: 40
 7: 40
 8: 40


 9: 40
10: 40
11: 40
12: 39
12: 53
13: 40


13: 53
14: 53
16: 40
16: 53
17: 40
17: 53


18: 40
18: 53
19: 53
21: 39
22: 39
23: 40


24: 40
27: 40
28: 40
29: 15
29: 40
30: 39







There are 17 hits at base# 40



There are 7 hits at base# 53




There are 4 hits at base# 39




There are 1 hits at base# 41












ScrFI CCngg

39














 1: 41
 2: 40
 3: 40
 3: 41
 4: 40
 4: 41


 5: 40
 6: 32
 6: 40
 7: 32
 7: 40
 8: 40


 9: 32
 9: 40
10: 40
11: 40
12: 39
12: 53


13: 40
13: 53
14: 53
16: 40
16: 53
17: 40


17: 53
18: 40
18: 53
19: 40
19: 53
21: 39


22: 39
23: 40
29: 40
26: 40
27: 40
28: 40


29: 15
29: 40
30: 39







There are 21 hits at base# 40



There are 4 hits at base# 39




There are 3 hits at base# 41












MaeIII gtnac

16














 1: 52
 2: 52
 3: 52
 4: 52
 5: 52
 6: 52


 7: 52
 9: 52
26: 52
27: 10
27: 52
28: 10


28: 52
29: 10
29: 52
30: 52







There are 13 hits at base# 52











Tsp45I gtsac

15














 1: 52
 2: 52
 3: 52
 4: 52
 5: 52
 6: 52


 7: 52
 9: 52
27: 10
27: 52
28: 10
28: 52


29: 10
29: 52
30: 52







There are 12 hits at base# 52











HphI tcacc

26














 1: 53
 2: 53
 3: 53
 4: 53
 5: 53
 6: 53


 7: 53
 8: 53
 9: 53
10: 53
11: 59
13: 59


14: 59
17: 59
18: 59
19: 59
20: 59
21: 59


22: 59
23: 59
24: 59
25: 59
27: 59
28: 59


30: 59
31: 59







There are 16 hits at base# 59


There are 10 hits at base# 53










BspMI ACCTGCNNNNn (SEQ ID NO: 349)
14














11: 61
13: 61
14: 61
17: 61
18: 61
19: 61


20: 61
21: 61
22: 61
23: 61
24: 61
25: 61


30: 61
31: 61







There are 14 hits at base# 61 Goes into CDR1





















Table 12: Matches to URE FR3 adapters in 79 human HC.


A. List of Heavy-chains genes sampled











AF008566
af103343
HSA235676
HSU94412
MCOMFRAA


AF035043
AF103367
HSA235675
HSU94415
MCOMFRVA


AF103026
AF103368
HSA235674
H5U94416
S82745


af103033
AF103369
HSA235673
HSU94417
S82764


AF103061
AF103370
HSA240559
HSU94418
582240


Af103072
af103371
HSCB201
HSU96389
SABVH369


af103078
AF103372
HSIGGVHC
HSU96391
SADEIGVH


AF103099
AF158381
HSU44791
HSU96392
SAH2IGVH


AF103102
E05213
HSU44793
HSU96395
SDA3IGVH


AF103103
E05886
HSU82771
HSZ93849
SIGVHTTD


AF103174
E05887
HSU82949
HSZ93850
SUK4IGVH


AF103186
H5A235661
HSU82950
HSZ93851



af103187
H5A235664
HSU82952
H5Z93853



AF103195
HSA235660
HSU82961
HSZ93855



af103277
H5A235659
HSU86522
HSZ93857



af103286
H5A235678
HSU86523
HSZ93860



AF103309
H5A235677
H5U92452
HSZ93863










Table 12B. Testing all distinct GLGs from bases 89.1 to 93.2 of


the heavy variable domain
















Id











NO:
Nb
0
1
2
3
4


SEQ ID





1
38
15
11
10
0
2
Seq1
gtgtattactgtgc
25


2
19
7
6
4
2
0
Seq2
gtAtattactgtgc
26


3
1
0
0
1
0
0
Seq3
gtgtattactgtAA
27


4
7
1
5
1
0
0
Seq4
gtgtattactgtAc
28


5
0
0
0
0
0
0
Seq5
Ttgtattactgtgc
29


6
0
0
0
0
0
0
Seq6
TtgtatCactgtgc
30


7
3
1
0
1
1
0
Seq7
ACAtattactgtgc
31


8
2
0
2
0
0
0
Seq8
ACgtattactutuc
32


9
9
2
2
4
1
0
Seq9
ATgtattactgtgc
33


Group

26
26
21
4
2





Cumulative

26
52
73
77
79










Table 12C Most important URE recognition seqs in FR3 Heavy














1
VHSzy1
GTGtattactgtgc
(ON_SHC103)
(SEQ ID NO: 25)


2
VHSzy2
GTAtattactgtqc
(ON_SHC323)
(SEQ ID NO: 26)


3
VHSzy4
GTGtattactgtac
(ON_SHC349)
(SEQ ID NO: 28)


4
VHSzy9
ATGtattactgtgc
(ON_SHC5a)
(SEQ ID NO: 33)










Table 12D, testing 79 human HC V genes with four probes





Number of sequences.......... 79


Number of bases.............. 29143

















Number of mismatches




















Id
Best
0
1
2
3
4
5








1
39
15
11
10
1
2
0
Seq1
gtgtattactgtgc
(SEQ ID NO: 25)


2
22
7
6
5
3
0
1
Seq2
gtAtattactgtgc
(SEQ ID NO: 26)


3
7
1
5
1
0
0
0
5eq4
gtgtattactgtAc
(SEQ ID NO: 28)


4
11
2
4
4
1
0
0
Seq9
ATgtattactgtgc
(SEQ ID NO: 33)
















Group
25
26
20
5
2






Cumulative
25
51
71
76
78





One sequence has five mismatches with sequences 2, 4, and 9; it is scored as best for 2.


Id is the number of the adapter.


Best is the number of sequence for which the identified adapter was the best available.


The rest of the table shows how well the sequences match the adapters. For example, there are 10 sequences that match VHSzy1(Id = 1) with 2 mismatches and are worse for all other adapters. In this sample, 90% come within 2 bases of one of the four adapters.













TABLE 13







The following list of enzymes was taken from


rebase.neb.com/cgi-bin/asymmlist.


I have removed the enzymes that a) cut within the recognition, b) cut on


both sides of the recognition, or c) have fewer than 2 bases between


recognition and closest cut site.


REBASE Enzymes


Apr. 13, 2001


Type II restriction enzymes with asymmetric recognition sequences:










Enzymes
Recognition Sequence
Isoschizomers
Suppliers





AarI
CACCTGCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_

y





AceIII
CAGCTCNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_







Bbr7I
GAAGACNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_







BbvI
GCAGCNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_

y





BbvII
GAAGACNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_







Bce83I
CTTGAGNNNNNNNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}







BceAI
ACGGCNNNNNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NN_

y





BcefI
ACGGCNNNNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}N_







BciVI
GTATCCNNNNN_N{circumflex over ( )}
BfuI
y





BfiI
ACTGGGNNNN{circumflex over ( )}N_
BmrI
y





BinI
GGATCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}N_







BscAI
GCATCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NN_







BseRI
GAGGAGNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}

y





BsmFI
GGGACNNNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_
BspLU11III
y





BspMI
ACCTGCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_
Acc36I
y





EciI
GGCGGANNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}

y





Eco57I
CTGAAGNNNNNNNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}
BspHT5I
y





FauI
CCCGCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NN_
BstFZ438I
y





FokI
GGATGNNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_
BstPZ418I
y





GsuI
CTGGAGNNNNNNNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}

y





HgaI
GACGCNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNNN_

y





HphI
GGTGANNNNNNN_N{circumflex over ( )}
AsuHPI
y





MboII
GAAGANNNNNNN_N{circumflex over ( )}

Y





MlyI
GAGTCNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}
SchI
y





MmeI
TCCRACNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}







MnlI
CCTCNNNNNN_N{circumflex over ( )}

y





PleI
GAGTCNNNN{circumflex over ( )}N_
PpsI
y





RleAI
CCCACANNNNNNNNN_NNN{circumflex over ( )}







SfaNI
GCATCNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_
BspST5I
y





SspD5I
GGTGANNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}







Sth132I
CCCGNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_







StsI
GGATGNNNNNNNNNN{circumflex over ( )}NNNN_







TaqII
GACCGANNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )},





CACCCANNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}







Tth111II
CAARCANNNNNNNNN_NN{circumflex over ( )}







UbaPI
CGAACG







(SEQ ID NOs: 356-390, respectively, in order of appearance) The notation is {circumflex over ( )} means cut the upper strand and _ means cut the lower strand. If the upper and lower strand are cut at the same place, then only {circumflex over ( )} appears.














TABLE 14







(FOKlact)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 350)





(VHEx881)
5′-AATAgTAgAc TgcAgTgTcc TcAgcccTTA AgcTgTTcAT cTgcAAgTAg-



AgAgTATTcT TAgAgTTgTc TcTAgAcTTA gTgAAgcg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 351)







! note that VHEx881 is the reverse complement of the ON below








!
[RC] 5′-cgCttcacTaag-


!
Scab........


!
Synthetic 3-23 as in Table 206


!
|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-


!
 XbaI...


!
|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|t-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 352)


!
       AflII...





(VHBA881)
5′-cgCttcacTaag-



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-



|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgt gcg ag-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 353)





(VHBB881)
5′-cgCttcacTaag-



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-



|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgt Acg ag-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 354)





(VH881PCR)
5′-cgCttcacTaag|TCT|AGA|gac|aac -3′ (SEQ ID NO: 355)
















TABLE 15





Use of FokI as “Universal Restriction Enzyme”















FokI-for dsDNA, | represents sites of cleavage


sites of cleavage


5′-cacGGATGtg--nnnnnnn|nnnnnnn-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 15)





3′-gtgCCTACac--nnnnnnnnnnn|nnn-5′ (SEQ ID NO: 16)









RECOG



NITion of Foki










Case I 




embedded image







Case II 




embedded image







Case III (Case I rotated 180 degrees)




embedded image







Case IV (Case II rotated 180 degrees) 




embedded image







Improved FokI adapters 





FokI-for dsDNA, | represents sites of cleavage 


Case I 


Stem 11, loop 5, stem 11, recognition 17 




embedded image







Case II


Stem 10, loop 5, stem 10, recognition 18




embedded image







Case III (Case I rotated 180 degrees)


Stem 11, loop 5, stem 11, recognition 20 




embedded image







Case IV (Case II rotated 180 degrees)


Stem 11, loop 4, stem 11, recognition 17 







embedded image







BseRI




embedded image


















TABLE 16





Human heavy chains bases 88.1 to 94.2


















Number of sequences . . . 840

















Number of Mismatchers.......

Probe




















Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Name
Sequence............
Dot form............





1
364
152
97
76
26
7
4
2
0
VHS881-1.1
gctgtgtattactgtgcgag
gctgtgtattactgtgcgag


2
265
150
60
33
13
5
4
0
0
VHS881-1.2
gccgtgtattactgtgcgag
..c.................


3
96
14
34
16
10
5
7
9
1
VHS881-2.1
gccgtatattactgtgcgag
..c..a..............


4
20
0
3
4
9
2
2
0
0
VHS881-4.1
gccgtgtattactgtacgag
..c............a....


5
95
25
36
18
11
2
2
0
1
VHS881-9.1
gccatgtattactgtgcgag
..ca................


















840
341
230
147
69
21
19
11
2
(SEQ ID NOs: 391-395, respectively in order of




341
571
718
787
808
827
838
840
appearance)













88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95
Codon number as in Table 195












Recognition..............
Stem......
Loop.
Stem......





(VHS881-1.1)
5′-gctgtgtat|tact-gtgcgag

cA

cATcc

gTg

TTgTT

aAc

ggATg

Tg-3′



(VHS881-1.2)
5′-gccgtgtat|tact-gtgcgag

cA

cATcc

gTg

TTgTT

cAc

ggATg

Tg-3′



(VH5881-2.1)
5′-gccgtatat|tact-gtgcgag

cA

cATcc

gTg

TTgTT

cAc

ggATg

Tg-3′



(VHS881-4.1)
5′-gccgtgtat|tact-gtacgag

cA

cATcc

gTg

TTgTT

cAc

ggATg

Tg-3′



(VHS881-9.1)
5′-gccatgtat|tact-gtgcgag

cA

cATcc

gTg

TTgTT

cAc

ggATg

Tg-3′










                 | site of substrate cleavage










(Sequences in the left column above are SEQ ID NOs 391-395, respectively in oder of appearance;


Sequences in the right column above are all SEQ ID NO: 396)











(FOKIact)
5′ cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 396)





(VHEx881)
5′-AATAgTAgAc TgcAgTgTcc TcAgtccTTA AgcTgTTcAT cTgcAAgTAg-



AgAgTATTcT TAgAgTTgTc TcTAgAcTTA gTgAAgcg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 397)










note that VHEx881 is the reverse complement of the ON below








[RC]
5′-cgCttcacTaag-



Scab . . . 



Synthetic 3.23 as in Table 206



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-



XbaI . . . 



|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|t-3′



AflII . . . 





(VHBA881)
5′-cgCttcacTaag-



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-



|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgt gcg ag=3′ (SEQ ID NO: 398)





(VHbb881)
5′-cgCttcacTaag-



|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|-



|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgt Acg ag-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 618)





(VH881PCR)
5′-cgCttcacTaag|TCT|AGA|gac|aac -3′ (SEQ ID NO: 399)
















TABLE 17





Kappa, bases 12-30


























ID
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Name
Sequence........... Dot Form...........






1
84
40
21
20
1
2
0
0
SK12O12
gacccagtctccatcctcc gacccagtctccatcctcc
(residues 26-44 of


2
32
19
3
6
2
1
0
1


SEQ ID NO: 400)


3
26
17
8
1
0
0
0
0
SK12A17
gactcagtctccactctcc ...t.........ct....
(residues 26-44 of


4
40
21
18
1
0
0
0
0


SEQ ID NO: 401)



182
97
50
28
3
3
0
1
SK12A27
gacgcagtctccaggcacc ...gg.........g.a.. 
(residues 26-44 of




97
147
175
178
181
181
182


SEQ ID NO: 402)











SK12A11
gacgcagtctccagccacc ...g.........g..a..
(residues 26-44 of













SEQ ID NO: 403)










URE adapters:












Stem...... Loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(SzKB1230-O12)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg ggAggATggAgAcTgggTc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 400)


 [RC]
5′-gacccagtaccatcacc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... loop. Stem......



             FokI.      FokI.






Stem...... Loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(SzKB1230-A17)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg ggAgAgTggAgAcTgAgTc- 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 401)


[RC}
5′-gactcagtaccactacc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... loop. Stem......



             FokI.      FokI.






Stem...... Loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(SzKB1230-A27)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg ggTgccTggAgAcTgcgTc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 402)


[RC]
5′-gacgcagtctccaggcacc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... loop. Stem......



             FokI.      FokI.






Stem...... Loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(SzKB1230-A11)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg ggTggcTggAgAcTgcgTc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 403)


[RC}
5′-gacgcagtctccagccacc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... loop. Stem......



             FokI.      FokI.










What happens in the upper strand:











(SzKB1230-
5′-gac cca gtc | tcc a-tc ctc c-3′ (residues 26-44 of SEQ ID NO: 400)


O12*)
| Site of cleavage in substrate





(SzKB1230-
5′-gac tca gtc| tcc a-ct ctc c-3′ (residues 26-44 of SEQ ID NO: 401)


A17*)






(SzKB1230-
5′-gac gca gtc | tcc a-gg cac c-3′ (residues 26-44 of SEQ ID NO: 402)


A27*)






(SzKB1230-
5′-gac gca gtc | tcc a-gc cac c-3′ (residues 26-44 of SEQ ID NO: 403)


A11*)






(kapextURE)
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTgcAcAA gAc ATc cAg-3′ sense strand (residues 26-44 of



   Scab.............ApaLI.                   SEQ ID NO: 404)





(kapextUREPCR)
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTg-3′ (residues 26-44 of SEQ ID NO: 405)



   Scab.............





(kaBR01UR)
5′-ggAggATggA cTggATgTcT TgTgcAcTgT gAcAAgAgTA gAgg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 406)


[RC]
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTgcAcAA gAc ATc cAg tcc a-tc ctc c-3′ ON above is R.C. of this one


(kaBR02UR)
5′-ggAgAgTggA cTggATgTcT TgTgcAcTgT gAcAAgAgTA gAgg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 407)


[RC]
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTgcAcAA gAc ATc cAg tcc a-ct ctc c-3′ ON above is R.C. of this one


(kaBR03UR)
5′-ggTgccTggA cTggATgTcT TgTgcAcTgT gAcAAgAgTA gAgg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 408)


[RC]
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTgcAcAA gAc ATc cAg tcc a-gg cac c-3′ ON above is R.C. of this one


(kaBR04UR)
5′-ggTggcTggA cTggATgTcT TgTgcAcTgT gAcAAgAgTA gAgg-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 409)


[RC]
5′-ccTctactctTgTcAcAgTgcAcAA gAc ATc cAg tcc a-gc cac c-3′ ON above is R.C. of this one



   Scab.............ApaLI.
















TABLE 18





Lambda URE adapters bases 13.3 to 19.3















Number of sequences . . . 128
















Number of mismatches.





















Id
Ntot
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Name
Sequence........... Dot form..........





1
58
45
7
1
0
0
0
2
2
1
VL133-2a2
gtctcctggacagtcgatc gtctccggacagtcgatc


2
16
10
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
2

(residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 410)


3
17
6
0
0
0
4
1
1
5
0
VL133-3l
ggccttgggacagacagtc .g.cttg.....a.ag..


4
37
3
0
10
4
4
3
7
4
2

(residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 411)



128
64
8
11
5
8
5
11
11
5
VL133-2c
gtctcctggacagtcagtc ..............ag..



64
72
83
88
96
101
112
123
128

VL133-1c
(residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 412)














ggccccagggcagagggtc .g.c..a g...ag.g..














(residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 413)












Stem...... loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(VL133-2a2)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg gATcgAcTgTccAggAgAc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 410)


[RC]
5′-gtctcctggacagtcgatc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... Loop. Stem......






Stem...... loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(VL133-3l)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg gAcTgTcTgTcccAAggcc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 411)


[RC]
5′-ggccttgggacagacagtc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... Loop. Stem......






Stem...... loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(VL133-2c)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg gAcTgAcTgTccAggAgAc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 412)


[RC]
5′-gtctcctggacagtcagtc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′



Recognition........ Stem...... Loop. Stem......






Stem...... loop. Stem...... Recognition........


(VL133-1c)
5′-cAcATccgTg TTgTT cAcggATgTg gAcccTcTgcccTgggcc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 413)


[RC]
5′-ggccccagggcagagggtc cAcATccgTg AAcAA cAcggATgTg-3′










What happens in the top strand:












| site of cleavage in the upper strand


(VL133-2a2*)
5′-g tct cct g|ga cag tcg atc (residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 410)


(VL133-3l*)
5′-g gcc ttg g|ga cag aca gtc (residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 411)


(VL133-2c*)
5′-g tct cct g|ga cag tca gtc (residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 412)


(VL133-1c*)
5′-g gcc cca g|gg cag agg gtc (residues 632-635 of SEQ ID NO: 413)







The following Extenders and Bridges all encode the AA sequence of 2a2 for codons 1-15












     1


(ON_LamEx133)
5′-ccTcTgAcTgAgT gcA cAg -






2 3  4  5  6  7  8 9  10 11 12



AGt gcT TtA acC caA ccG gcT AGT gtT AGC ggT-






 13 14 15



tcC ccG g2a2 (SEQ ID NO: 414)



1


(ON_LamB1-133)[RC]
5′-ccTcTgAcTgAgT gcAcAg -






2 3   4 5  6 7  8  9  10 11 12



AGt gcT TtA acC caA ccG gcT AGT gtT AGC ggT-






 13 14 15



tcC ccG g ga cag tcg at-3′! (SEQ ID NO: 415)_2a2 custom-character  the actual seq is the



reverse complement of the



one shown.





(ON_LamB2-133)[RC]
5′-ccTcTgAcTgAgT gcAcAg -






2 3   4 5  6 7  8  9  10 11 12



AGt gcT TtA acC caA ccG gcT AGT gtT AGC ggT-






 13 14 15



tcC ccG g ga cag aca gt-3′! (SEQ ID NO: 416) 31 custom-character  the actual seq is the



reverse complement of the



one shown.





(ON_LamB3-133)[RC]
5′-ccTcTgAcTgAgT gcAcAg -






2 3   4 5  6 7  8  9  10 11 12



AGt gcT TtA acC caA ccG gcT AGT gtT AGC ggT-






 13 14 15



tcC ccG g ga cag tca gt -3′! (SEQ ID NO: 417) _2c custom-character  the actual seq is the



reverse complement of the



one shown.


(ON_LamB4-133)[RC]
5′-ccTcTgAcTgAgT gcAcAg -






 2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10  11  12



AGt gcT TtA acC caA ccG gcT AGT gtT AGC ggT-s






 13  14  15



tcC ccG g gg cag agg gt-3′ ! (SEQ ID NO: 413) 1c custom-character  the



actual seq is the



reverse complement of the



one shown.





(ON_Lam133PCR)
5′-ccTcTgAcTaAgT gcA cAg AGt gc-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 419)
















TABLE 19







Cleavage of 75 human light chains.















Planned location


Enzyme
Recognition*
Nch
Ns
of site














AfeI
AGCgct
0
0






AflII

Cttaag

0
0
HC FR3





AgeI
Accggt
0
0






AscI

GGcgcgcc

0
0
After LC





BglII
Agatct
0
0






BsiWI
Cgtacg
0
0






BspDI
ATcgat
0
0






BssHII
Gcgcgc
0
0






EstBI
TTcgaa
0
0






DraIII
CACNNNgtg
0
0






EagI
Cggccg
0
0






FseI
GGCCGGcc
0
0






FscI
TGCgca
0
0






HpaI
GTTaac
0
0






MfeI

Caattg

0
0
HC FR1





MluI
Acgcgt
0
0






NcoI

Ccatgg

0
0
Heavy chain signal





NheI

Gctagc

0
0
HC/anchor linker





NotI

GCggccgc

0
0
In linker after HC





NruI
TCGcga
0
0






PacI
TTAATtaa
0
0






PmeI
GTTTaaac
0
0






PmlI
CACgtg
0
0






PvuI
CGATcg
0
0






SacII
CCGCgg
0
0






Sall
Gtcgac
0
0






SfiI

GGCCNNNNnggcc

0
0
Heavy Chain signal






(SEQ ID NO: 436)





SgfI
GCGATcgc
0
0






SnaBI
TACgta
0
0






StuI
AGGcct
0
0






XbaI

Tctaga

0
0
HC FR3





AatII
GACGTc
1
1






AclI
AAcgtt
1
1






AseI
ATtaat
1
1






BsmI
GAATGCN
1
1






BspEI

Tccgga

1
1
HC FR1






(SEQ ID NO: 437)





BstXI

CCANNNNNntgg

1
1
HC FR2






(SEQ ID NO: 433)





DrdI
GACNNNNnngtc
1
1






HindIII
Aagctt
1
1






PciI
Acatgt
1
1






SapI
gaagagc
1
1






ScaI
AGTact
1
1






SexAI
Accwggt
1
1






SpeI
Actagt
1
1






TliI
Ctcgag
1
1






XhoI
Ctcgag
1
1






BcgI
cgannnnnntgc
2
2
(SEQ ID NO: 439)





BlpI
GCtnagc
2
2






BssSI
Ctcgtg
2
2






BstAPI
GCANNNNntgc
2
2
(SEQ ID NO: 440)





EspI
GCtnagc
2
2






KasI
Ggcgcc
2
2






PflMI
CCANNNNntgg
2
2
(SEQ ID NO: 441)





XmnI
GAANNnnttc
2
2
(SEQ ID NO: 442)





ApaLI

Gtgcac

3
3
LC signal seq





NaeI
GCCggc
3
3






NgoMI
Gccggc
3
3






PvuII
CAGctg
3
3






RsrII
CGgwocg
3
3






BsrBI
GAGogg
4
4






BsrDI
GCAATGNNn
4
4






BstZ17I
GTAtac
4
4






EcoRI
Gaattc
4
4






SphI
GCATGc
4
4






SspI
AATatt
4
4






AccI
GTmkac
5
5






BclI
Tgatca
5
5






BsmBI
Nnnnnngagacg
5
5
(SEQ ID NO: 443)





BsrGI
Tgtaca
5
5






DraI
TTTaaa
6
6






NdeI

CAtatg

6
6
HC FR4





SwaI
ATTTaaat
6
6






BamHI
Ggatcc
7
7






SacI
GAGCTc
7
7






BciVI
GTATCCNNNNNN
8
8
(SEQ ID NO: 444)





BsaBI
GATNNnnatc
8
8
(SEQ ID NO: 619)





NsiI
ATGCAt
8
8






Bsp120I

Gggccc

9
9
CH1





ApaI

GGGCCc

9
9
CH1





PspOOMI
Gggccc
9
9






BspHI
Tcatga
9
11






EcoRV
GATatc
9
9






AhdI
GACNNNnngtc
11
11
(SEQ ID NO: 445)





BbsI
GAAGAC
11
14






PsiI
TTAtaa
12
12






BsaI
GGTCTCNnnnn
13
15
(SEQ ID NO: 446)





XmaI
Cccggg
13
14






AvaI
Cycgrg
14
16






BglI
GCCNNNNnggc
14
17
(SEQ ID NO: 447)





AlwNI
CAGNNNctg
16
16






BspMI
ACCTGC
17
19






XcmI
CCANNNNNnnnntgg
17
26
(SEQ ID NO: 448)





BstEII

Ggtnacc

19
22
HC FR4





Sse8387I
CCTGCAgg
20
20






AvrII
Cctagg
22
22






HincII
GTYrac
22
22






BsgI
GTGCAG
27
29






MscI
TGGcca
30
34






BseRI
NNnnnnnnnnctcctc
32
35
(SEQ ID NO: 449)





Bsu36I
CCtnagg
35
37






PstI
CTGCAg
35
40






EciI
nnnnnnnnntccgcc
38
40
(SEQ ID NO: 450)





PpuMI
RGgwccy
41
50






StyI
Ccwwgg
44
73






EcoO109I
RGgnccy
46
70






Acc65I
Ggtacc
50
51






KpnI
GGTACc
50
51






BpmI
ctccag
53
82






AvaII
Ggwcc
71
124





*cleavage occurs in the top strand after the last upper-case base. For REs that cut palindromic sequences, the lower strand is cut at the symmetrical site.













TABLE 20







Cleavage of 79 human heavy chains















Planned location


Enzyme
Recognition
Nch
Ns
of site














AfeI
AGCgct
0
0






AflII

Cttaag

0
0
HC FR3





AscI

GGcgcgcc

0
0
After LC





BsiWI
Cgtacg
0
0






BspDI
ATcgat
0
0






BssHII
Gcgcgc
0
0






FseI
GGCCGGcc
0
0






HpaI
GTTaac
0
0






NheI

Gctagc

0
0
HC Linker





NotI

GCggccgc

0
0
In linker,






HC/anchor





NruI
TCGcga
0
0






NsiI
ATGCAt
0
0






PacI
TTAATtaa
0
0






PciI
Acatgt
0
0






PmeI
GTTTaaac
0
0






PvuI
CGATcg
0
0






RsrII
CGgwccg
0
0






SapI
gaagagc
0
0






SfiI

GGCCNNNNnggcc

0
0
HC signal seq






(SEQ ID NO: 420)





SgfI
GCGATcgc
0
0






SwaI
ATTTaaat
0
0






AclI
aAcgtt
1
1






AgeI
Accggt
1
1






AseI
ATtaat
1
1






AvrII
Cctagg
1
1






BsmI
GAATGCN
1
1






BsrBI
GAGcgg
1
1






BsrDI
GCAAtGNNn
1
1






DraI
TTTaaa
1
1






FspI
TGCgca
1
1






HindIII
Aagctt
1
1






MfeI

Caattg

1
1
HC FR1





NaeI
GCCggc
1
1






NgoMI
Gccggc
1
1






SpeI
Actagt
1
1






Acc65I
Ggtacc
2
2






BstBI
TTcgaa
2
2






KpnI
GGTACc
2
2






MluI
Acgcgt
2
2






NcoI

Ccatgg

2
2
In HC signal seq





NdeI

CAtatg

2
2
HC FR4





PmlI
CACgtg
2
2






XcmI
CCANNNNNnnnntgg
2
2
(SEQ ID NO: 421)





BcgI
cgannnnnntgc
3
3
(SEQ ID NO: 422)





BclI
Tgatca
3
3






BglI
GCCNNNNnggc
3
3
(SEQ ID NO: 423)





BsaBI
GATNNnnatc
3
3
(SEQ ID NO: 424)





BsrGI
Tgtaca
3
3






SnaBI
TACgta
3
3






Sse8387I
CCTGCAgg
3
3






ApaLI

Gtgcac

4
4
LC Signal/FR1





BspHI
Tcatga
4
4






BssSI
Ctcgtg
4
4






PsiI
TTAtaa
4
5






SphI
GCATGc
4
4






AhdI
GACNNNnngtc
5
5
(SEQ ID NO: 425)





BspEI

Tccgga

5
5
HC FR1





MscI
TGGcca
5
5






SacI
GAGCTc
5
5






ScaI
AGTact
5
5






SexAI
Accwggt
5
6






SspI
AATatt
5
5






Tlil
Ctcgag
5
5






XhoI
Ctcgag
5
5






BbsI
GAAGAC
7
8






BstAPI
GCANNNNntgc
7
8
(SEQ ID NO: 426)





BstZ17I
GTAtac
7
7






EcoRV
GATatc
7
7






EcoRI
Gaattc
8
8






BlpI
GCtnagc
9
9






Bsu36I
CCtnagg
9
9






DraIII
CACNNNgtg
9
9






EspI
GCtnagc
9
9






StuI
AGGcct
9
13






XbaI

Tctaga

9
9
HC FR3





Bsp120I

Gggccc

10
11
CH1





ApaI

GGGCCc

10
11
CH1





PspOOMI
Gggccc
10
11






BciVI
GTATCCNNNNNN
11
11
(SEQ ID NO: 427)





Sall
Gtcgac
11
12






DrdI
GACNNNNnngtc
12
12
(SEQ ID NO: 428)





KasI
Ggcgcc
12
12






XmaI
Cccggg
12
14






BglII
Agatct
14
14






HincII
GTYrac
16
18






BamHI
Ggatcc
17
17






PflMI
CCANNNNntgg
17
18
(SEQ ID NO: 429)





BsmBI
Nnnnnngagacg
18
21
(SEQ ID NO: 430)





BstXI

CCANNNNNntgg

18
19
HC FR2






(SEQ ID NO: 431)





XmnI
GAANNnnttc
18
18
(SEQ ID NO: 432)





SacII
CCGCgg
19
19






PstI
CTGCAg
20
24






PvuII
CAGctg
20
22






AvaI
Cycgrg
21
24






EagI
Cggccg
21
22






AatII
GACGTc
22
22






BspMI
ACCTGC
27
33






AccI
GTmkac
30
43






StyI
Ccwwgg
36
49






AlwNI
CAGNNNctg
38
44






BsaI
GGTCTCNnnnn
38
44
(SEQ ID NO: 433)





PpuMI
RGgwccy
43
46






BsgI
GTGCAG
44
54






BseRI
NNnnnnnnnnctcctc
48
60
(SEQ ID NO: 434)





EciI
nnnnnnnnntccgcc
52
57
(SEQ ID NO: 435)





BstEII

Ggtnacc

54
61
HC Fr4, 47/79






have one





EccO109I
RGgnccy
54
86






BpmI
ctccag
60
121






AvaII
Ggwcc
71
140
















TABLE 21





MALIA3, annotated















MALIA3 9532 bases


--------------------------------------------------------------------


(SEQ ID NO: 451)








1
aat gct act act att agt aga att gat gcc acc ttt tca gct cgc gcc



gene ii continued


49
cca aat gaa aat ata gct aaa cag gtt att gac cat ttg cga aat gta


97
tct aat ggt caa act aaa tct act cgt tcg cag aat tgg gaa tca act


145
gtt aca tgg aat gaa act tcc aga cac cgt act tta gtt gca tat tta


193
aaa cat gtt gag cta cag cac cag att caa caa tta agc tct aag cca


241
tcc gca aaa atg acc tct tat caa aag gag caa tta aag gta ctc tct


289
aat cct gac ctg ttg gag ttt gct tcc ggt ctg gtt cgc ttt gaa gct


337
cga att aaa acg cga tat ttg aag tct ttc ggg ctt cct ctt aat ctt


385
ttt gat gca atc cgc ttt gct tct gac tat aat agt cag ggt aaa gac


433
ctg att ttt gat tta tgg tca ttc tcg ttt tct gaa ctg ttt aaa gca


481
ttt gag ggg gat tca ATG aat att tat gac gat tcc gca gta ttg gac



    RBS?......      Start gene x, ii continues


529
gct atc cag tct aaa cat ttt act att acc ccc tct ggc aaa act tct


577
ttt gca aaa acc tct cgc tat ttt ggt ttt tat cat cgt ctg gta aac


625
gag ggt tat gat agt gtt gct ctt act atg cct cgt aat tcc ttt tgg


673
cgt tat gta tct gca tta gtt gaa tgt ggt att cct aaa tct caa ctg


721
atg aat ctt tct acc tgt aat aat gtt gtt ccg tta gtt cgt ttt att


769
aac gta gat ttt tct tcc caa cgt cct gac tgg tat aat gag cca gtt


817
ctt aaa atc gca TAA



                End X & II


832
ggtaattca ca










(SEQ ID NO: 623)









 M1              E5                 Q10                 T15


843
ATG att aaa gtt gaa att aaa cca tct caa gcc caa ttt act act cgt



Start gene V






S17         S20                 P25                 E30


891
tct ggt gtt tct cgt cag ggc aag cct tat tca ctg aat gag cag ctt






        V35                 E40                 V45


939
tgt tac gtt gat ttg ggt aat gaa tat ccg gtt ctt gtc aag att act






    D50                 A55                 L60


987
ctt gat gaa ggt cag cca gcc tat gcg cct ggt cTG TAC Acc gtt cat






L65                 V70                 S75                 R80


1035
ctg tcc tct ttc aaa gtt ggt cag ttc ggt tcc ctt atg att gac cgt






                P85     K87 end of V


1083
ctg cgc ctc gtt ccg gct aag TAA C





1108
ATG gag cag gtc gcg gat ttc gac aca att tat cag gcg atg



Start gene VII





1150
ata caa atc tcc gtt gta ctt tgt ttc gcg ctt ggt ata atc






                  VII and IX overlap.



                  ..... S2  V3  L4  V5    (SEQ ID NO: 624)       S10


1192
gct ggg ggt caa agA TGA gt gtt tta gtg tat tct ttc gcc tct ttc gtt



                    End VII



                  |start IX



L13     W15                 G20                 T25             E29


1242
tta ggt tgg tgc ctt cgt agt ggc att acg tat ttt acc cgt tta atg gaa





1293
act tcc tc






 .... stop of IX, IX and VIII overlap by four bases


1301
ATG aaa aag tct tta gtc ctc aaa gcc tct gta gcc gtt gct acc ctc



Start signal sequence of viii.





1349
gtt ccg atg ctg tct ttc gct gct gag ggt gac gat ccc gca aaa gcg



                            mature VIII --->


1397
gcc ttt aac tcc ctg caa gcc tca gcg acc gaa tat atc ggt tat gcg


1445
tgg gcg atg gtt gtt gtc att


1466
gtc ggc gca act atc ggt atc aag ctg ttt aag


1499
aaa ttc acc tcg aaa gca 1515



 ...........  −35  ..





1517
agc tga taaaccgat acaattaaag gctccttttg



           ..... −10   ...





1552
gagccttttt ttttGGAGAt ttt S.D. underlined






     <------ III signal sequence ---------------------------->



      M   K   K   L   L   F   A   I   P   L   V (SEQ ID NO: 452)


1575
caac GTG aaa aaa tta tta ttc gca att cct tta gtt 1611






 V   P   F   Y   S   H   S   A   Q


1612
gtt cct ttc tat cct cac aGT gcA Cag tCT



                         ApaLI...





1642
GTC GTG ACG CAG CCG CCC TCA GTG TCT GGG GCC CCA GGG CAG



AGG GTC ACC ATC TCC TGC ACT GGG AGC AGC TCC AAC ATC GGG GCA



  BstEII...


1729
GGT TAT GAT GTA CAC TGG TAC CAG CAG CTT CCA GGA ACA GCC CCC AAA


1777
CTC CTC ATC TAT GGT AAC AGC AAT CGG CCC TCA GGG GTC CCT GAC CGA


1825
TTC TCT GGC TCC AAG TCT GGC ACC TCA GCC TCC CTG GCC ATC ACT


1870
GGG CTC CAG GCT GAG GAT GAG GCT GAT TAT


1900
TAC TGC CAG TCC TAT GAC AGC AGC CTG AGT


1930
GGC CTT TAT GTC TTC GGA ACT GGG ACC AAG GTC ACC GTC



                                      BstEII...


1969
CTA GGT CAG CCC AAG GCC AAC CCC ACT GTC ACT


2002
CTG TTC CCG CCC TCC TCT GAG GAG CTC CAT GCC AAC AAG GCC ACA CTA


2050
GTG TGT CTG ATC AGT GAC TTC TAC CCG GGA GCT GTG ACA GTG GCC TGG


2098
AAG GCA GAT AGC AGC CCC GTC AAG GCG GGA GTG GAG ACC ACC ACA CCC


2146
TCC AAA CAA AGC AAC AAC AAG TAC GCG GCC AGC AGC TAT CTG AGC CTG


2194
ACG CCT GAG CAG TGG AAG TCC CAC AGA AGC TAC AGC TGC CAG GTC ACG


2242
CAT GAA GGG AGC ACC GTG GAG AAG ACA GTG GCC CCT ACA GAA TGT TCA


2290
TAA TAA ACCG CCTCCACCGG GCGCGCCAAT TCTATTTCAA GGAGACAGTC ATA



                      AscI.....










(SEQ ID NO: 453)









PelB signal---------------------------------------------->



 M   K   Y   L   L   P   T   A   A   A   G   L   L   L   L


2343
ATG AAA TAC CTA TTG CCT ACG GCA GCC GCT GGA TTG TTA TTA CTC






16 17 18 19 20          21  22



A  A  Q  P  A            M   A


2388
gcG GCC cag ccG GCC     atg gcc



  SfiI.............



          NgoMI...(1/2)



                 NcoI.........






                            FR1(DP47/V3-23)---------------



                            23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30



                             E   V   Q   L   L   E   S   G


2409
                            gaa|gtt|CAA|TTG|tta|gag|tct|ggt|



                                   | MfeI |






--------------FR1--------------------------------------------



 31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45



  G   G   L   V   Q   P   G   G   S   L   R   L   S   C   A


2433
|ggc|ggt|ctt|gtt|cag|cct|ggt|ggt|tct|tta|cgt|ctt|tct|tgc|gct|






----FR1---------------->|...CDR1................|---FR2------



 46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60



  A   S   G   F   T   F   S   S   Y   A   M   S   W   V   R


2478
|gct|TCC|GGA|ttc|act|ttc|tct|tCG|TAC|Gct|atg|tct|tgg|gtt|cgC|



    | BspEI |                 | BsiWI|                     |BstXI.






-------FR2--------------------------------->|...CDR2.........



 61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75



  Q   A   P   G   K   G   L   E   W   V   S   A   I   S   G


2523
|CAa|gct|ccT|GGt|aaa|ggt|ttg|gag|tgg|gtt|tct|gct|atc|tct|ggt|



...BstXI      |






.....CDR2...........................................|---FR3---



 76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90



  S   G   G   S   T   Y   Y   A   D   S   V   K   G   R   F


2568
|tct|ggt|ggc|agt|act|tac|tat|gct|gac|tcc|gtt|aaa|ggt|cgc|ttc|






--------FR3--------------------------------------------------



 91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99  100 101 102 103 104 105



  T   I   S   R   D   N   S   K   N   T   L   Y   L   Q   M


2613
|act|atc|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|



        | XbaI |






---FR3----------------------------------------------------->|



 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120



  N   S   L   R   A   E   D   T   A   V   Y   Y   C   A   K


2658
|aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgc|gct|aaa|



       |AflII |               | PstI |






.......CDR3.................|----FR4-------------------------



 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135



  D   Y   E   G   T   G   Y   A   F   D   I   W   G   Q   G


2703
|gac|tat|gaa|ggt|act|ggt|tat|gct|ttc|gaC|ATA|TGg|ggt|caa|ggt|



                                       | NdeI |(1/4)






--------------FR4---------->|



 136 137 138 139 140 141 142



  T   M   V   T   V   S   S


2748
|act|atG|GTC|ACC|gtc|tct|agt



       | BstEII |







From BstEII onwards, pV323 is same as pCES1, except as noted.


BstEII sites may occur in light chains; not likely to be unique in final


vector.












                   143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152



                    A   S   T   K   G   P   S   V   F   P


2769
                   gcc tcc acc aaG GGC CCa tcg GTC TTC ccc



                                 Bsp120I.      BbsI...(2/2)



                                 ApaI....






153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167



 L   A   P   S   S   K   S   T   S   G   G   T   A   A   L


2799
ctg gca ccC TCC TCc aag agc acc tct ggg ggc aca gcg gcc ctg



          BseRI...(2/2)






168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182



 G   C   L   V   K   D   Y   F   P   E   P   V   T   V   S


2844
ggc tgc ctg GTC AAG GAC TAC TTC CCc gaA CCG GTg acg gtg tcg



                                      AgeI....






183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197



 W   N   S   G   A   L   T   S   G   V   H   T   F   P   A


2889
tgg aac tca GGC GCC ctg acc agc ggc gtc cac acc ttc ccg gct



            KasI...(1/4)






198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212



 V   L   Q   S   S   G   L   Y   S   L   S   S   V   V   T


2934
gtc cta cag tCt agc GGa ctc tac tcc ctc agc agc gta gtg acc



            (Bsu36I...)(knocked out)






213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227



 V   P   S   S   S   L   G   T   Q   T   Y   I   C   N   V


2979
gtg ccC tCt tct agc tTG Ggc acc cag acc tac atc tgc aac gtg



        (BstXT...........)N.B. destruction of BstXI & BpmI sites.






228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242



 N   H   K   P   S   N   T   K   V   D   K   K   V   E   P


3024
aat cac aag ccc agc aac acc aag gtg gac aag aaa gtt gag ccc






243 244 245



 K   S   C   A   A   A   H   H   H   H   H   H   S   A


3069
aaa tct tgt GCG GCC GCt cat cac cac cat cat cac tct gct



            NotI......






 E   Q   K   L   I   S   E   E   D   L   N   G   A   A


3111
gaa caa aaa ctc atc tca gaa gag gat ctg aat ggt gcc gca






 D   I   N   D   D   R   M     A   S    G   A


3153
GAT ATC aac gat gat cgt atg   gct AGC  ggc gcc



rEK cleavage site..........   NheI...  KasI...



EcoRV..










Domain 1 ------------------------------------------------------------









 A   E   T   V   E   S   C   L   A


3183
gct gaa act gtt gaa agt tat tta gca






 K   P   H   T   E   I   S   F


3210
aaa ccc cat aca gaa aat tca ttt






 T   N   V   W   K   D   D   K   T


3234
aCT AAC GTC TGG AAA GAC GAC AAA Act






 L   D   R   Y   A   N   Y   E   G   C   L   K   N   A   T   G   V


3261
tta gat cgt tac gct aac tat gag ggt tgt ctg tgG AAT GCt aca ggc gtt



                                              BsmI____






 V   V   C   T   G   D   E   T   Q   C   Y   G   T   W   V   P   I


3312
gta gtt tgt act ggt GAC GAA ACT CAG TGT TAC GGT ACA TGG GTT cct att






 G   L   A   I   P   E   N


3363
ggg ctt gct atc cct gaa aat










L1 linker ------------------------------------









 E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S


3384
gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct






 E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   T


3414
gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc ggt act










Domain 2 ------------------------------------








3444
aaa cct cct gag tac ggt gat aca cct att ccg ggc tat act tat atc aac


3495
cct ctc gac ggc act tat ccg cct ggt act gag caa aac ccc gct aat cct


3546
aat cct tct ctt GAG GAG tct cag cct ctt aat act ttc atg ttt cag aat



                BseRI__


3597
aat agg ttc cga aat agg cag ggg gca tta act gtt tat acg ggc act


3645
gtt act caa ggc act gac ccc gtt aaa act tat tac cag tac act cct


3693
gta tca tca aaa gcc atg tat gac gct tac tgg aac ggt aaa ttC AGA



                                                          AlwNI


3741
GAC TGc gct ttc cat tct ggc ttt aat gaa gat cca ttc gtt tgt gaa



 AlwNI


3789
tat caa ggc caa tcg tct gac ctg cct caa cct cct gtc aat gct





3834
ggc ggc ggc tct







start L2 -------------------------------------------------------------








3846
ggt ggt ggt tct


3858
ggt ggc ggc tct


3870
gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct


3900
gag ggt ggc ggc tct gag gga ggc ggt tcc


3930
ggt ggt ggc tct ggt    end L2










Domain 3


(SEQ ID NO: 454)


-----------------------------------------------------------









 S   G   D   F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N   K   G   A


3945
tcc ggt gat ttt gat tat gaa aag atg gca aac gct aat aag ggg gct






 M   T   E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S   D   A   K   G


3993
atg acc gaa aat gcc gat gaa aac gcg cta cag tct gac gct aaa ggc






 K   L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A   A   I   D   G   F


4041
aaa ctt gat tct gtc gct act gat tac ggt gct gct atc gat ggt ttc






 I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G   N   G   A   T   G   D


4089
att ggt gac gtt tcc ggc ctt gct aat ggt aat ggt gct act ggt gat






 F   A   G   S   N   S   Q   M   A   Q   V   G   D   G   D   N


4137
ttt gct ggc tct aat tcc caa atg gct caa gtc ggt gac ggt gat aat






 S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R   Q   Y   L   P   S   L   P   Q


4135
tca cct tta atg aat aat ttc cgt caa tat tta cct tcc ctc cct caa






 S   V   E   C   R   P   F   V   F   S   A   G   K   P   Y   E


4233
tcg gtt gaa tgt cgc cct ttt gtc ttt agc gct ggt aaa cca tat gaa






 F   S   I   D   C   D   K   I   N   L   F   R


4281
ttt tct att gat tgt gac aaa ata aac tta ttc cgt



                                            End Domain 3






 G   V   F   A   F   L   L   Y   V   A   T   F   M   Y   V  F140


4317
ggt gtc ttt gcg ttt ctt tta tat gtt gcc acc ttt atg tat gta ttt



start transmembrane segment






 S   T   F   A   N   I   L


4365
tct acg ttt gct aac ata ctg






 R   N   K   E   S


4386
cgt aat aag gag tct TAA stop of iii



Intracellular anchor.






(SEQ ID NO: 455)



    M1  P2  V   L  L5   G   I   P   L  L10  L   R   F   L  G15


4404
tc ATG cca gtt ctt ttg ggt att ccg tta tta ttg cgt ttc ctc ggt



   Start VI





4451
ttc ctt ctg gta act ttg ttc ggc tat ctg ctt act ttt ctt aaa aag


4499
ggc ttc ggt aag ata gct att gct att tca ttg ttt ctt gct ctt att


4547
att ggg ctt aac tca att ctt gtg ggt tat ctc tct gat att agc gct


4595
caa tta ccc tct gac ttt gtt cag ggt att cag tta att ctc ccg tct


4643
aat gcg ctt ccc tgt ttt tat gtt att ctc tct gta aag gct gct att


4691
ttc att ttt gac gtt aaa caa aaa atc gtt tct tat ttg gat tgg gat






(SEQ ID NO: 456)



           M1  A2  V3      F5                 L10         G13


4739
aaa TAA t ATG gct gtt tat ttt gta act ggc aaa tta ggc tct gga



end VI Start gene I






 14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28



 K   T   L   V   S   V   G   K   I   Q   D   K   I   V   A


4785
aag acg ctc gtt agc gtt ggt aag att cag gat aaa att gta gct






 29  30  31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43



 G   C   K   I   A   T   N   L   D   L   R   L   Q   N   L


4830
ggg tgc aaa ata gca act aat ctt gat tta agg ctt caa aac ctc






 44  45  46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58



 P   Q   V   G   R   F   A   K   T   P   R   V   L   R   I


4875
ccg caa gtc ggg agg ttc gct aaa acg cct cgc gtt ctt aga ata






 59  60  61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73



 P   D   K   P   S   I   S   D   L   L   A   I   G   R   G


4920
ccg gat aag cct tct ata tct gat ttg ctt gct att ggg cgc ggt






 74  75  76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88



 N   D   S   Y   D   E   N   K   N   G   L   L   V   L   D


4965
aat gat tcc tac gat gaa aat aaa aac ggc ttg ctt gtt ctc gat






 89  90  91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103



 E   C   G   T   W   F   N   T   R   S   W   N   D   K   E


5010
gag tgc ggt act tgg ttt aat acc cgt tct tgg aat gat aag gaa






104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118



 R   Q   P   I   I   D   W   F   L   H   A   R   K   L   G


5055
aga cag ccg att att gat tgg ttt cta cat gct cgt aaa tta gga






119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133



 W   D   I   I   F   L   V   Q   D   L   S   I   V   D   K


5100
tgg gat att att ttt ctt gtt cag gac tta tct att gtt gat aaa






134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148



 Q   A   R   S   A   L   A   E   H   V   V   Y   C   R   R


5145
cag gcg cgt tct gca tta gct gaa cat gtt gtt tat tgt cgt cgt






149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163



 L   D   R   I   T   L   P   F   V   G   T   L   Y   S   L


5190
ctg gac aga att act tta cct ttt gtc ggt act tta tat tct ctt






164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178



 I   T   G   S   K   M   P   L   P   K   L   H   V   G   V


5235
att act ggc tcg aaa atg cct ctg cct aaa tta cat gtt ggc gtt






179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193



 V   K   Y   G   D   S   Q   L   S   P   T   V   E   R   W


5280
gtt aaa tat ggc gat tct caa tta agc cct act gtt gag cgt tgg






194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208



 L   Y   T   G   K   N   L   Y   N   A   Y   D   T   K   Q


5325
ctt tat act ggt aag aat ttg tat aac gca tat gat act aaa cag






209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223



 A   F   S   S   N   Y   D   S   G   V   Y   S   Y   L   T


5370
gct ttt tct agt aat tat gat tcc ggt gtt tat tct tat tta acg






224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238



 P   Y   L   S   H   G   R   Y   F   K   P   L   N   L   G


5415
cct tat tta tca cac ggt cgg tat ttc aaa cca tta aat tta ggt






239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253



 Q   K   M   K   L   T   K   I   Y   L   K   K   F   S   R


5460
cag aag atg aaa tta act aaa ata tat ttg aaa aag ttt tct cgc






254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268



 V   L   C   L   A   I   G   F   A   S   A   F   T   Y   S


5505
gtt ctt tgt ctt gcg att gga ttt gca tca gca ttt aca tat agt






269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283



 Y   I   T   Q   P   K   P   E   V   K   K   V   V   S   Q


5550
tat ata acc caa cct aag ccg gag gtt aaa aag gta gtc tct cag






284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298



 T   Y   D   F   D   K   F   T   I   D   S   S   Q   R   L


5595
acc tat gat ttt gat aaa ttc act att gac tct tct cag cgt ctt






299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313



 N   L   S   Y   R   Y   V   F   K   D   S   K   G   K   L


5640
aat cta agc tat cgc tat gtt ttc aag gat tct aag gga aaa TTA



                                                        PacI






314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328



 I   N   S   D   D   L   Q   K   Q   G   Y   S   L   T   Y


5685
ATT AAt agc gac gat tta cag aag caa ggt tat tca ctc aca tat



PacI






329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343



i  I   D   L   C   T   V   S   I   K   K   G   N   S   N   E



(SEQ ID NO: 620)



iv                                                    M1  K


5730
att gat tta tgt act gtt tcc att aaa aaa ggt aat tca aAT Gaa



                                                     Start IV






  344 345 346 347 348 349



i  I   V   K   C   N   .End of I



iv  L3  L   N5  V   I7  N    F  V10


5775
  att gtt aaa tgt aat TAA T TTT GTT







IV continued.....








5800
ttc ttg atg ttt gtt tca tca tct tct ttt gct cag gta att gaa atg


5846
aat aat tcg cct ctg cgc gat ttt gta act tgg tat tca aag caa tca


5896
ggc gaa tcc gtt att gtt tct ccc gat gta aaa ggt act gtt act gta


5944
tat tca tct gac gtt aaa cct gaa aat cta cgc aat ttc ttt att tct


5992
gtt tta cgt gct aat aat ttt gat atg gtt ggt tca att cct tcc ata


6040
att cag aag tat aat cca aac aat cag gat tat att gat gaa ttg cca


6088
tca tct gat aat cag gaa tat gat gat aat tcc gct cct tct ggt ggt


6136
ttc ttt gtt ccg caa aat gat aat gtt act caa act ttt aaa att aat


6184
aac gtt cgg gca aag gat tta ata cga gtt gtc gaa ttg ttt gta aag


6232
tct aat act tct aaa tcc tca aat gta tta tct att gac ggc tct aat


6280
cta tta gtt gtt TCT gca cct aaa gat att tta gat aac ctt cct caa



                 ApaLI removed


6326
ttc ctt tct act gtt gat ttg cca act gac cag ata ttg att gag ggt


6376
ttg ata ttt gag gtt cag caa ggt gat gct tta gat ttt tca ttt gct


6424
gct ggc tct cag cgt ggc act gtt gca ggc ggt gtt aat act gac cgc


6472
ctc acc tct att tta tct tct gct ggt ggt tcg ttc ggt att ttt aat


6520
ggc gat gtt tta ggg cta tca gtt cgc gca tta aag act aat agc cat


6568
tca aaa ata ttg tct gtg cca cgt att ctt acg ctt tca ggt cag aag


6616
ggt tct atc tct gtT GGC CAg aat gtc cct ttt att act ggt cgt gtg



                  MscI____


6664
act ggt gaa tct gcc aat gta aat aat cca ttt cag acg att gag cgt


6712
caa aat gta ggt att tcc atg agc gtt ttt cct gtt gca atg gct ggc


6760
ggt aat att gtt ctg gat att acc agc aag gcc gat agt ttg agt tct


6808
tct act cag gca agt gat gtt att act aat caa aga agt att gct aca


6856
acg gtt aat ttg cgt gat gga cag act ctt tta ctc ggt ggc ctc act


6904
gat tat aaa aac act tct caa gat tct ggc gta ccg ttc ctg tct aaa


6952
atc cct tta atc ggc ctc ctg ttt agc tcc cgc tct gat tcc aac gag


7000
gaa agc acg tta tac gtg ctc gtc aaa gca acc ata gta cgc gcc ctg


7048
TAG cggcgcatt



End IV


7060
aagcgcggcg ggtgtggtgg ttacgcgcag cgtgaccgct acacttgcca gcgccctagc


7120
gcccgctcct ttcgctttct tcccttcctt tctcgccacg ttcGCCGGCt ttccccgtca



                                               NgoMI_


7180
agctctaaat cgggggctcc ctttagggtt ccgatttagt gctttacggc acctcgaccc


7240
caaaaaactt gatttgggtg atggttCACG TAGTGggcca tcgccctgat agacggtttt



                            DraIII____


7300
tcgccctttG ACGTTGGAGT Ccacgttctt taatagtggc ctcttgttcc aaactggaac



         DrdI__________


7360
aacactcaac cctatctcgg gctattcttt tgatttataa ggaattttgc cgatttcgga


7420
accaccatca aacaggattt tcgcctgctg gggcaaacca gcgtggaccg cttgctgcaa


7480
ctctctcagg gccaggcggt gaagggcaat CAGCTGttgc cCGTCTCact ggtgaaaaga



                                 PvuII.      BsmBi.


7540
aaaaccaccc tGGATCC AAGCTT



            BamHI  HindIII (½)



         Insert carrying bLa gene


7563
gcaggtg gcacttttcg gggaaatgtg cgcggaaccc


7600
ctatttgttt atttttctaa atacattcaa atatGTATCC gctcatgaga caataaccct



                                     BciVI


7660
1 gataaatgct tcaataatat tgaaaaAGGA AGAgt



                              RBS.?...



Start bla gene


7695
ATG agt att caa cat ttc cgt gtc gcc ctt att ccc ttt ttt gcg gca ttt


7746
tgc ctt cct gtt ttt gct cac cca gaa acg ctg gtg aaa gta aaa gat gct


7797
gaa gat cag ttg ggC gCA CGA Gtg ggt tac atc gaa ctg gat ctc aac agc



                     BssSi...



                 ApaLI removed


7848
ggt aag atc ctt gag agt ttt cgc ccc gaa gaa cgt ttt cca atg atg agc


7899
act ttt aaa gtt ctg cta tgt cat aca cta tta tcc cgt att gac gcc ggg


7950
caa gaG CAA CTC GGT CGc cgg gcg cgg tat tct cag aat gac ttg gtt gAG



      BcgI____________                                           ScaI


8001
TAC Tca cca gtc aca gaa aag cat ctt acg gat ggc atg aca gta aga gaa



ScaI_


8052
tta tgc agt gct gcc ata acc atg agt gat aac act gcg gcc aac tta ctt


8103
ctg aca aCG ATC Gga aaa ccg aag gag cta acc gct ttt ttg cac aac atg



         PvuI_


8154
ggg gat cat gta act cgc ctt gat cgt tgg gaa ccg gag ctg aat gaa gcc


8205
ata cca aac gac gag cgt gac acc acg atg cct gta gca atg cca aca acg


8256
tTG CGC Aaa cta tta act ggc gaa cta ctt act cta gct tcc cgg caa caa



 FspI....





8307
tta ata gac tgg atg gag gcg gat aaa gtt gca gga cca ctt ctg cgc tcg


8358
GCC ctt ccG GCt ggc tgg ttt att gct gat aaa tct gga gcc ggt gag cgt



BglI__________


8409
gGG TCT Cgc ggt atc att gca gca ctg ggg cca gat ggt aag ccc tcc cgt



 BsaI____


8460
atc gta gtt atc tac acG ACg ggg aGT Gag gca act atg gat gaa cga aat



                      AhdI___________


8511
aga cag atc gct gag ata ggt gcc tca ctg att aag cat tgg TAA ctgt



                                                        stop


8560
cagaccaagt ttactcatat atactttaga ttgatttaaa acttcatttt taatttaaaa


8620
ggatctaggt gaagatcctt tttgataatc tcataaccaa aatcccttaa cgtgagtttt


8680
cgttccactg tacgtaagac cccc


8704
AAGCTT   GTCGAC tgaa tggcgaatgg cgctttgcct



HindIII  SalI..



(2/2)    HincII


8740
ggtttccggc accagaagcg gtgccggaaa gctggctgga gtgcgatctt





8790
CCTGAGG



Bsu36I_


8797
     ccgat actgtcgtcg tcccctcaaa ctggcagatg


8832
cacggttacg atgcgcccat ctacaccaac gtaacctatc ccattacggt caatccgccg


8892
tttgttccca cggagaatcc gacgggttgt tactcgctca catttaatgt tgatgaaagc


8952
tggctacagg aaggccagac gcgaattatt tttgatggcg ttcctattgg ttaaaaaatg


9012
agctgattta acaaaaattt aacgcgaatt ttaacaaaat attaacgttt acaATTTAAA



                                                          SwaI...


9072
Tatttgctta tacaatcttc ctgtttttgg ggcttttctg attatcaacc GGGGTAcat



                                                       RBS?


9131
ATG att gac atg cta gtt tta cga tta ccg ttc atc gat tct ctt gtt tgc



Start gene II


9182
tcc aga ctc tca ggc aat gac ctg ata gcc ttt gtA GAT CTc tca aaa ata



                                              BglII...


9233
gct acc ctc tcc ggc atg aat tta tca gct aga acg gtt gaa tat cat att


9284
gat ggt gat ttg act gtc tcc ggc ctt tct cac cct ttt gaa tct tta cct


9335
aca cat tac tca ggc att gca ttt aaa ata tat gag ggt tct aaa aat ttt


9386
tat cct tgc gtt gaa ata aag gct tct ccc gca aaa gta tta cag ggt cat


9437
aat gtt ttt ggt aca acc gat tta gct tta tgc tct gag gct tta ttg ctt


9488
aat ttt gct aat tct ttg cct tgc ctg tat gat tta ttg gat gtt 9532







gene II continues
















TABLE 21B





Sequence of MALIA3, condensed















LOCUS MALIA3 9532 CIRCULAR


ORIGIN


(SEQ ID NO: 451)








1
AATGCTACTA CTATTAGTAG AATTGATGCC ACCTTTTCAG CTCGCGCCCC AAATGAAAAT





61
ATAGCTAAAC AGGTTATTGA CCATTTGCGA AATGTATCTA ATGGTCAAAC TAAATCTACT





121
CGTTCGCAGA ATTGGGAATC AACTGTTACA TGGAATGAAA CTTCCAGACA CCGTACTTTA





181
GTTGCATATT TAAAACATGT TGAGCTACAG CACCAGATTC AGCAATTAAG CTCTAAGCCA





241
TCCGCAAAAA TGACCTCTTA TCAAAAGGAG CAATTAAAGG TACTCTCTAA TCCTGACCTG





301
TTGGAGTTTG CTTCCGGTCT GGTTCGCTTT GAAGCTCGAA TTAAAACGCG ATATTTGAAG





361
TCTTTCGGGC TTCCTCTTAA TCTTTTTGAT GCAATCCGCT TTGCTTCTGA CTATAATAGT





421
CAGGGTAAAG ACCTGATTTT TGATTTATGG TCATTCTCGT TTTCTGAACT GTTTAAAGCA





481
TTTGAGGGGG ATTCAATGAA TATTTATGAC GATTCCGCAG TATTGGACGC TATCCAGTCT





541
AAACATTTTA CTATTACCCC CTCTGGCAAA ACTTCTTTTG CAAAAGCCTC TCGCTATTTT





601
GGTTTTTATC GTCGTCTGGT AAACGAGGGT TATGATAGTG TTGCTCTTAC TATGCCTCGT





661
AATTCCTTTT GGCGTTATGT ATCTGCATTA GTTGAATGTG GTATTCCTAA ATCTCAACTG





721
ATGAATCTTT CTACCTGTAA TAATGTTGTT CCGTTAGTTC GTTTTATTAA CGTAGATTTT





781
TCTTCCCAAC GTCCTGACTG GTATAATGAG CCAGTTCTTA AAATCGCATA AGGTAATTCA





841
CAATGATTAA AGTTGAAATT AAACCATCTC AAGCCCAATT TACTACTCGT TCTGGTGTTT





901
CTCGTCAGGG CAAGCCTTAT TCACTGAATG AGCAGCTTTG TTACGTTGAT TTGGGTAATG





961
AATATCCGGT TCTTGTCAAG ATTACTCTTG ATGAAGGTCA GCCAGCCTAT GCGCCTGGTC





1021
TGTACACCGT TCATCTGTCC TCTTTCAAAG TTGGTCAGTT CGGTTCCCTT ATGATTGACC





1081
GTCTGCGCCT CGTTCCGGCT AAGTAACATG GAGCAGGTCG CGGATTTCGA CACAATTTAT





1141
CAGGCGATGA TACAAATCTC CGTTGTACTT TGTTTCGCGC TTGGTATAAT CGCTGGGGGT





1201
CAAAGATGAG TGTTTTAGTG TATTCTTTCG CCTCTTTCGT TTTAGGTTGG TGCCTTCGTA





1261
GTGGCATTAC GTATTTTACC CGTTTAATGG AAACTTCCTC ATGAAAAAGT CTTTAGTCCT





1321
CAAAGCCTCT GTAGCCGTTG CTACCCTCGT TCCGATGCTG TCTTTCGCTG CTGAGGGTGA





1381
CGATCCCGCA AAAGCGGCCT TTAACTCCCT GCAAGCCTCA GCGACCGAAT ATATCGGTTA





1441
TGCGTGGGCG ATGGTTGTTG TCATTGTCGG CGCAACTATC GGTATCAAGC TGTTTAAGAA





1501
ATTCACCTCG AAAGCAAGCT GATAAACCGA TACAATTAAA GGCTCCTTTT GGAGCCTTTT





1561
TTTTTGGAGA TTTTCAACGT GAAAAAATTA TTATTCGCAA TTCCTTTAGT TGTTCCTTTC





1621
TATTCTCACA GTGCACAGTC TGTCGTGACG CAGCCGCCCT CAGTGTCTGG GGCCCCAGGG





1681
CAGAGGGTCA CCATCTCCTG CACTGGGAGC AGCTCCAACA TCGGGGCAGG TTATGATGTA





1741
CACTGGTACC AGCAGCTTCC AGGAACAGCC CCCAAACTCC TCATCTATGG TAACAGCAAT





1801
CGGCCCTCAG GGGTCCCTGA CCGATTCTCT GGCTCCAAGT CTGGCACCTC AGCCTCCCTG





1861
GCCATCACTG GGCTCCAGGC TGAGGATGAG GCTGATTATT ACTGCCAGTC CTATGACAGC





1921
AGCCTGAGTG GCCTTTATGT CTTCGGAACT GGGACCAAGG TCACCGTCCT AGGTCAGCCC





1981
AAGGCCAACC CCACTGTCAC TCTGTTCCCG CCCTCCTCTG AGGAGCTCCA AGCCAACAAG





2041
GCCACACTAG TGTGTCTGAT CAGTGACTTC TACCCGGGAG CTGTGACAGT GGCCTGGAAG





2101
GCAGATAGCA GCCCCGTCAA GGCGGGAGTG GAGACCACCA CACCCTCCAA ACAAAGCAAC





2161
AACAAGTACG CGGCCAGCAG CTATCTGAGC CTGACGCCTG AGCAGTGGAA GTCCCACAGA





2221
AGCTACAGCT GCCAGGTCAC GCATGAAGGG AGCACCGTGG AGAAGACAGT GGCCCCTACA





2281
GAATGTTCAT AATAAACCGC CTCCACCGGG CGCGCCAATT CTATTTCAAG GAGACAGTCA





2341
TAATGAAATA CCTATTGCCT ACGGCAGCCG CTGGATTGTT ATTACTCGCG GCCCAGCCGG





2401
CCATGGCCGA AGTTCAATTG TTAGAGTCTG GTGGCGGTCT TGTTCAGCCT GGTGGTTCTT





2461
TACGTCTTTC TTGCGCTGCT TCCGGATTCA CTTTCTCTTC GTACGCTATG TCTTGGGTTC





2521
GCCAAGCTCC TGGTAAAGGT TTGGAGTGGG TTTCTGCTAT CTCTGGTTCT GGTGGCAGTA





2581
CTTACTATGC TGACTCCGTT AAAGGTCGCT TCACTATCTC TAGAGACAAC TCTAAGAATA





2641
CTCTCTACTT GCAGATGAAC AGCTTAAGGG CTGAGGACAC TGCAGTCTAC TATTGCGCTA





2701
AAGACTATGA AGGTACTGGT TATGCTTTCG ACATATGGGG TCAAGGTACT ATGGTCACCG





2761
TCTCTAGTGC CTCCACCAAG GGCCCATCGG TCTTCCCCCT GGCACCCTCC TCCAAGAGCA





2821
CCTCTGGGGG CACAGCGGCC CTGGGCTGCC TGGTCAAGGA CTACTTCCCC GAACCGGTGA





2881
CGGTGTCGTG GAACTCAGGC GCCCTGACCA GCGGCGTCCA CACCTTCCCG GCTGTCCTAC





2941
AGTCTAGCGG ACTCTACTCC CTCAGCAGCG TAGTGACCGT GCCCTCTTCT AGCTTGGGCA





3001
CCCAGACCTA CATCTGCAAC GTGAATCACA AGCCCAGCAA CACCAAGGTG GACAAGAAAG





3061
TTGAGCCCAA ATCTTGTGCG GCCGCTCATC ACCACCATCA TCACTCTGCT GAACAALLAC





3121
TCATCTCAGA AGAGGATCTG AATGGTGCCG CAGATATCAA CGATGATCGT ATGGCTGGCG





3181
CCGCTGAAAC TGTTGAAAGT TGTTTAGCAA AACCCCATAC AGAAAATTCA TTTACTAACG





3241
TCTGGAAAGA CGACAAAACT TTAGATCGTT ACGCTAACTA TGAGGGTTGT CTGTGGAATG





3301
CTACAGGCGT TGTAGTTTGT ACTGGTGACG AAACTCAGTG TTACGGTACA TGGGTTCCTA





3361
TTGGGCTTGC TATCCCTGAA AATGAGGGTG GTGGCTCTGA GGGTGGCGGT TCTGAGGGTG





3421
GCGGTTCTGA GGGTGGCGGT ACTAAACCTC CTGAGTACGG TGATACACCT ATTCCGGGCT





3481
ATACTTATAT CAACCCTCTC GACGGCACTT ATCCGCCTGG TACTGAGCAA AACCCCGCTA





3541
ATCCTAATCC TTCTCTTGAG GAGTCTCAGC CTCTTAATAC TTTCATGTTT CAGAATAATA





3601
GGTTCCGAAA TAGGCAGGGG GCATTAACTG TTTATACGGG CACTGTTACT CAAGGCACTG





3661
ACCCCGTTAA AACTTATTAC CAGTACACTC CTGTATCATC AAAAGCCATG TATGACGCTT





3721
ACTGGAACGG TAAATTCAGA GACTGCGCTT TCCATTCTGG CTTTAATGAA GATCCATTCG





3781
TTTGTGAATA TCAAGGCCAA TCGTCTGACC TGCCTCAACC TCCTGTCAAT GCTGGCGGCG





3841
GCTCTGGTGG TGGTTCTGGT GGCGGCTCTG AGGGTGGTGG CTCTGAGGGT GGCGGTTCTG





3901
AGGGTGGCGG CTCTGAGGGA GGCGGTTCCG GTGGTGGCTC TGGTTCCGGT GATTTTGATT





3961
ATGAAAAGAT GGCAAACGCT AATAAGGGGG CTATGACCGA AAATGCCGAT GAAAACGCGC





4021
TACAGTCTGA CGCTAAAGGC AAACTTGATT CTGTCGCTAC TGATTACGGT GCTGCTATCG





4081
ATGGTTTCAT TGGTGACGTT TCCGGCCTTG CTAATGGTAA TGGTGCTACT GGTGATTTTG





4141
CTGGCTCTAA TTCCCAAATG GCTCAAGTCG GTGACGGTGA TAATTCACCT TTAATGAATA





4201
ATTTCCGTCA ATATTTACCT TCCCTCCCTC AATCGGTTGA ATGTCGCCCT TTTGTCTTTA





4261
GCGCTGGTAA ACCATATGAA TTTTCTATTG ATTGTGACAA AATAAACTTA TTCCGTGGTG





4321
TCTTTGCGTT TCTTTTATAT GTTGCCACCT TTATGTATGT ATTTTCTACG TTTGCTAACA





4381
TACTGCGTAA TAAGGAGTCT TAATCATGCC AGTTCTTTTG GGTATTCCGT TATTATTGCG





4441
TTTCCTCGGT TTCCTTCTGG TAACTTTGTT CGGCTATCTG CTTACTTTTC TTAAAAAGGG





4501
CTTCGGTAAG ATAGCTATTG CTATTTCATT GTTTCTTGCT CTTATTATTG GGCTTAACTC





4561
AATTCTTGTG GGTTATCTCT CTGATATTAG CGCTCAATTA CCCTCTGACT TTGTTCAGGG





4621
TGTTCAGTTA ATTCTCCCGT CTAATGCGCT TCCCTGTTTT TATGTTATTC TCTCTGTAAA





4681
GGCTGCTATT TTCATTTTTG ACGTTAAACA AAAAATCGTT TCTTATTTGG ATTGGGATAA





4741
ATAATATGGC TGTTTATTTT GTAACTGGCA AATTAGGCTC TGGAAAGACG CTCGTTAGCG





4801
TTGGTAAGAT TCAGGATAAA ATTGTAGCTG GGTGCAAAAT AGCAACTAAT CTTGATTTAA





4861
GGCTTCAAAA CCTCCCGCAA GTCGGGAGGT TCGCTAAAAC GCCTCGCGTT CTTAGAATAC





4921
CGGATAAGCC TTCTATATCT GATTTGCTTG CTATTGGGCG CGGTAATGAT TCCTACGATG





4981
AAAATAAAAA CGGCTTGCTT GTTCTCGATG AGTGCGGTAC TTGGTTTAAT ACCCGTTCTT





5041
GGAATGATAA GGAAAGACAG CCGATTATTG ATTGGTTTCT ACATGCTCGT AAATTAGGAT





5101
GGGATATTAT TTTTCTTGTT CAGGACTTAT CTATTGTTGA TAAACAGGCG CGTTCTGCAT





5161
TAGCTGAACA TGTTGTTTAT TGTCGTCGTC TGGACAGAAT TACTTTACCT TTTGTCGGTA





5221
CTTTATATTC TCTTATTACT GGCTCGAAAA TGCCTCTGCC TAAATTACAT GTTGGCGTTG





5281
TTAAATATGG CGATTCTCAA TTAAGCCCTA CTGTTGAGCG TTGGCTTTAT ACTGGTAAGA





5341
ATTTGTATAA CGCATATGAT ACTAAACAGG CTTTTTCTAG TAATTATGAT TCCGGTGTTT





5401
ATTCTTATTT AACGCCTTAT TTATCACACG GTCGGTATTT CAAACCATTA AATTTAGGTC





5461
AGAAGATGAA ATTAACTAAA ATATATTTGA AAAAGTTTTC TCGCGTTCTT TGTCTTGCGA





5521
TTGGATTTGC ATCAGCATTT ACATATAGTT ATATAACCCA ACCTAAGCCG GAGGTTAAAA





5581
AGGTAGTCTC TCAGACCTAT GATTTTGATA AATTCACTAT TGACTCTTCT CAGCGTCTTA





5641
ATCTAAGCTA TCGCTATGTT TTCAAGGATT CTAAGGGAAA ATTAATTAAT AGCGACGATT





5701
TACAGAAGCA AGGTTATTCA CTCACATATA TTGATTTATG TACTGTTTCC ATTAAAAAAG





5761
GTAATTCAAA TGAAATTGTT AAATGTAATT AATTTTGTTT TCTTGATGTT TGTTTCATCA





5821
TCTTCTTTTG CTCAGGTAAT TGAAATGAAT AATTCGCCTC TGCGCGATTT TGTAACTTGG





5881
TATTCAAAGC AATCAGGCGA ATCCGTTATT GTTTCTCCCG ATGTAAAAGG TACTGTTACT





5941
GTATATTCAT CTGACGTTAA ACCTGAAAAT CTACGCAATT TCTTTATTTC TGTTTTACGT





6001
GCTAATAATT TTGATATGGT TGGTTCAATT CCTTCCATAA TTCAGAAGTA TAATCCAAAC





6061
AATCAGGATT ATATTGATGA ATTGCCATCA TCTGATAATC AGGAATATGA TGATAATTCC





6121
GCTCCTTCTG GTGGTTTCTT TGTTCCGCAA AATGATAATG TTACTCAAAC TTTTAAAATT





6181
AATAACGTTC GGGCAAAGGA TTTAATACGA GTTGTCGAAT TGTTTGTAAA GTCTAATACT





6241
TCTAAATCCT CAAATGTATT ATCTATTGAC GGCTCTAATC TATTAGTTGT TTCTGCACCT 





6301
AAAGATATTT TAGATAACCT TCCTCAATTC CTTTCTACTG TTGATTTGCC AACTGACCAG





6361
ATATTGATTG AGGGTTTGAT ATTTGAGGTT CAGCAAGGTG ATGCTTTAGA TTTTTCATTT





6421
GCTGCTGGCT CTCAGCGTGG CACTGTTGCA GGCGGTGTTA ATACTGACCG CCTCACCTCT





6481
GTTTTATCTT CTGCTGGTGG TTCGTTCGGT ATTTTTAATG GCGATGTTTT AGGGCTATCA





6541
GTTCGCGCAT TAAAGACTAA TAGCCATTCA AAAATATTGT CTGTGCCACG TATTCTTACG





6601
CTTTCAGGTC AGAAGGGTTC TATCTCTGTT GGCCAGAATG TCCCTTTTAT TACTGGTCGT





6661
GTGACTGGTG AATCTGCCAA TGTAAATAAT CCATTTCAGA CGATTGAGCG TCAAAATGTA





6721
GGTATTTCCA TGAGCGTTTT TCCTGTTGCA ATGGCTGGCG GTAATATTGT TCTGGATATT





6781
ACCAGCAAGG CCGATAGTTT GAGTTCTTCT ACTCAGGCAA GTGATGTTAT TACTAATCAA





6841
AGAAGTATTG CTACAACGGT TAATTTGCGT GATGGACAGA CTCTTTTACT CGGTGGCCTC





6901
ACTGATTATA AAAACACTTC TCAAGATTCT GGCGTACCGT TCCTGTCTAA AATCCCTTTA





6961
ATCGGCCTCC TGTTTAGCTC CCGCTCTGAT TCCAACGAGG AAAGCACGTT ATACGTGCTC





7021
GTCAAAGCAA CCATAGTACG CGCCCTGTAG CGGCGCATTA AGCGCGGCGG GTGTGGTGGT





7081
TACGCGCAGC GTGACCGCTA CACTTGCCAG CGCCCTAGCG CCCGCTCCTT TCGCTTTCTT





7141
CCCTTCCTTT CTCGCCACGT TCGCCGGCTT TCCCCGTCAA GCTCTAAATC GGGGGCTCCC





7201
TTTAGGGTTC CGATTTAGTG CTTTACGGCA CCTCGACCCC AAAAAACTTG ATTTGGGTGA





7261
TGGTTCACGT AGTGGGCCAT CGCCCTGATA GACGGTTTTT CGCCCTTTGA CGTTGGAGTC





7321
CACGTTCTTT AATAGTGGAC TCTTGTTCCA AACTGGAACA ACACTCAACC CTATCTCGGG





7381
CTATTCTTTT GATTTATAAG GGATTTTGCC GATTTCGGAA CCACCATCAA ACAGGATTTT





7441
CGCCTGCTGG GGCAAACCAG CGTGGACCGC TTGCTGCAAC TCTCTCAGGG CCAGGCGGTG





7501
AAGGGCAATC AGCTGTTGCC CGTCTCACTG GTGAAAAGAA AAACCACCCT GGATCCAAGC





7561
TTGCAGGTGG CACTTTTCGG GGAAATGTGC GCGGAACCCC TATTTGTTTA TTTTTCTAAA





7621
TACATTCAAA TATGTATCCG CTCATGAGAC AATAACCCTG ATAAATGCTT CAATAATATT





7681
GAAAAAGGAA GAGTATGAGT ATTCAACATT TCCGTGTCGC CCTTATTCCC TTTTTTGCGG





7741
CATTTTGCCT TCCTGTTTTT GCTCACCCAG AAACGCTGGT GAAAGTAAAA GATGCTGAAG





7801
ATCAGTTGGG CGCACGAGTG GGTTACATCG AACTGGATCT CAACAGCGGT AAGATCCTTG





7861
AGAGTTTTCG CCCCGAAGAA CGTTTTCCAA TGATGAGCAC TTTTAAAGTT CTGCTATGTC





7921
ATACACTATT ATCCCGTATT GACGCCGGGC AAGAGCAACT CGGTCGCCGG GCGCGGTATT





7981
CTCAGAATGA CTTGGTTGAG TACTCACCAG TCACAGAAAA GCATCTTACG GATGGCATGA





8041
CAGTAAGAGA ATTATGCAGT GCTGCCATAA CCATGAGTGA TAACACTGCG GCCAACTTAC





8101
TTCTGACAAC GATCGGAGGA CCGAAGGAGC TAACCGCTTT TTTGCACAAC ATGGGGGATC





8161
ATGTAACTCG CCTTGATCGT TGGGAACCGG AGCTGAATGA AGCCATACCA AACGACGAGC





8221
GTGACACCAC GATGCCTGTA GCAATGCCAA CAACGTTGCG CAAACTATTA ACTGGCGAAC





8281
TACTTACTCT AGCTTCCCGG CAACAATTAA TAGACTGGAT GGAGGCGGAT AAAGTTGCAG





8341
GACCACTTCT GCGCTCGGCC CTTCCGGCTG GCTGGTTTAT TGCTGATAAA TCTGGAGCCG





8401
GTGAGCGTGG GTCTCGCGGT ATCATTGCAG CACTGGGGCC AGATGGTAAG CCCTCCCGTA





8461
TCGTAGTTAT CTACACGACG GGGAGTCAGG CAACTATGGA TGAACGAAAT AGACAGATCG





8521
CTGAGATAGG TGCCTCACTG ATTAAGCATT GGTAACTGTC AGACCAAGTT TACTCATATA





8581
TACTTTAGAT TGATTTAAAA CTTCATTTTT AATTTAAAAG GATCTAGGTG AAGATCCTTT





8641
TTGATAATCT CATGACCAAA ATCCCTTAAC GTGAGTTTTC GTTCCACTGT ACGTAAGACC





8701
CCCAAGCTTG TCGACTGAAT GGCGAATGGC GCTTTGCCTG GTTTCCGGCA CCAGAAGCGG





8761
TGCCGGAAAG CTGGCTGGAG TGCGATCTTC CTGAGGCCGA TACTGTCGTC GTCCCCTCAA





8821
ACTGGCAGAT GCACGGTTAC GATGCGCCCA TCTACACCAA CGTAACCTAT CCCATTACGG





8881
TCAATCCGCC GTTTGTTCCC ACGGAGAATC CGACGGGTTG TTACTCGCTC ACATTTAATG





8941
TTGATGAAAG CTGGCTACAG GAAGGCCAGA CGCGAATTAT TTTTGATGGC GTTCCTATTG





9001
GTTAAAAAAT GAGCTGATTT AACAAAAATT TAACGCGAAT TTTAACAAAA TATTAACGTT





9061
TACAATTTAA ATATTTGCTT ATACAATCTT CCTGTTTTTG GGGCTTTTCT GATTATCAAC





9121
CGGGGTACAT ATGATTGACA TGCTAGTTTT ACGATTACCG TTCATCGATT CTCTTGTTTG





9181
CTCCAGACTC TCAGGCAATG ACCTGATAGC CTTTGTAGAT CTCTCAAAAA TAGCTACCCT





9241
CTCCGGCATG AATTTATCAG CTAGAACGGT TGAATATCAT ATTGATGGTG ATTTGACTGT





9301
CTCCGGCCTT TCTCACCCTT TTGAATCTTT ACCTACACAT TACTCAGGCA TTGCATTTAA





9361
AATATATGAG GGTTCTAAAA ATTTTTATCC TTGCGTTGAA ATAAAGGCTT CTCCCGCAAA





9421
AGTATTACAG GGTCATAATG TTTTTGGTAC AACCGATTTA GCTTTATGCT CTGAGGCTTT





9481
ATTGCTTAAT TTTGCTAATT CTTTGCCTTG CCTGTATGAT TTATTGGATG TT
















TABLE 22





Primers used in RACE amplification:







Heavy chain








HuCμ-FOR
5′-TGG AAG AGG CAC GTT CTT TTC TTT-3'


(1st PCR)
(SEQ ID NO: 457)


HuCμ-Nested
5′ CTT TTC TTT GTT GCC GTT GGG GTG-3′


(2nd PCR)
(SEQ ID NO: 458)










Kappa light chain








HuCkFor
5′-ACA CTC TCC CCT GTT GAA GCT CTT-3′


(1st PCR)
(SEQ ID NO: 459)


HuCkForAscI
5′-ACC GCC TCC ACC GGG CCC GCC TTA


(2nd PCR)
TTA ACA CTC TCC CCT GTT GAA GCT



CTT-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 460)










Lambda light chain


HuClambdaFor (1st PCR)








HuCL2-FOR
5′-TGA ACA TTC TGT AGG GGC CAC TG-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 461)


HuCL7-FOR
5′-AGA GCA TTC TGC AGG GGC CAC TG-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 462)










HuClambdaForAscI (2nd PCR)








HuCL2-FOR-
5′-ACC GCC TCC ACC GGG CGC GCC TTA


ASC
TTA TGA ACA TTC TGT AGG GGC CAC



TG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 463)


HuCL7-FOR-
5′-ACC GCC TCC ACC GGG CGC GCC TTA


ASC
TTA AGA GCA TTC TGC AGG GGC CAC



TG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 464)










GeneRAcer 5′ Primers provided with the kit


(Invitrogen)








5′A 1st PCR
(SEQ ID NO: 465)



5′CGACTGGAGCACGAGGACACTGA 3′


5′NA 2nd pCR
5′GGACACTGACATGGACTGAAGGAGTA-3′



(SEQ ID NO: 466)
















TABLE 23 





ONs used in Capture of kappa light chains using CJ method and BsmAI















REdapters (6)








ON_20SK15012
gggAggATggAgAcTgggTc (SEQ ID NO: 467)


ON_20SK15L12
gggAAgATggAgAcTgggTc (SEQ ID NO: 468)


ON_20SK15A17
gggAgAgTggAgAcTgAgTc (SEQ ID NO: 469)


ON_20SK15A27
gggTgccTggAgAcTgcgTc (SEQ ID NO: 470)


ON_20SK15A11
gggTggcTggAgAcTgcgTc (SEQ ID NO: 471)


ON_20SK15B3
gggAgTcTggAgAcTgggTc (residues 1-20 of SEQ ID NO: 477)










Bridges (6)








kapbri1012
gggAggATggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 472)


kapbri1L12
gggAAgATggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 473)


kapbri1A17
gggAgAgTggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 474)


kapbri1A27
gggTgccTggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 475)


kapbri1A11
gggTggcTggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 476)


kapbri1B3
gggAgTcTggAgAcTgggTcATcTggATgTcTTgTgcAcTgTgAcAgAgg (SEQ ID NO: 477)










Extender (5′ biotinylated)








kapext1bio
ccTcTgTcAcAgTgcAcAAgAcATccAgATgAcccAgTcTcc (SEQ ID NO: 478)










Primers








kaPCRt1
ccTcTgTcAcAgTgcAcAAgAc (SEQ ID NO: 479)


kapfor
5′-aca ctc tcc cct gtt gas gct ctt-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 480)





All ONs are written 5′ to 3′.













TABLE 24





PCR program for amplification of kappa DNA


















95° C.
 5 minutes



95° C.
15 seconds



65° C.
30 seconds



72° C.
 1 minute



72° C.
 7 minutes



 4° C.
hold



Reagents (100 ul reaction.):




Template
50 ng



10x turbo PCR buffer
1x



turbo Pfu
4U



dNTPs
200 μM each



kaPCRt1
300 nM



kapfor
300 nM

















TABLE 25 





h3401-h2 captured Via CJ with BsmAI 


(Nucleotidesequenceis SEQ ID NO: 481; amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 482) 















 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


 S   A   Q   D   I   Q   M   T   Q   S   P   A   T   L   S 


aGT GCA Caa gac atc cag atg acc cag tct cca gcc acc ctg tct 


 ApaLi...                                 a gcc acc ! L25, L6, L20, L2, L16, A11 


 Extender.................................Bridge... 


16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


 V   S   P   G   E   R   A   T   L   S   C   R   A   S   Q 


gtg tct cca ggg gaa agg gcc acc ctc tcc tgc agg gcc agt cag 


31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


 S   V   S   N   N   L   A   W   Y   Q   Q   K   P   G   Q 


agt gct agt aac aac tta gcc tgg tac cag cag aaa cct ggc cag 


46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


 V   P   R   L   L   I   K   G   A   S   T   R   A   T   D 


gtt ccc agg ctc ctc atc tat ggt gca tcc acc agg gcc act gat 


61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


 I   P   A   R   F   S   G   S   G   S   G   T   D   F   T 


atc cca gcc agg ttc agt ggc agt ggg tct ggg aca gac ttc act 


76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


 L   T   I   S   R   L   E   P   E   D   F   A   V   Y   Y 


ctc acc atc agc aga ctg gaa cct gaa gat ttt aca gtg tat tac 


91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99  100 101 102 103 104 105 


 C   Q   R   Y   G   S   S   P   G   W   T   F   G   Q   G 


tgt cag cgg tat ggt agc tca ccg ggg tgg acg ttc ggc caa ggg 


106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


 T   K   V   E   I   K   R   T   V   A   A   P   S   V   F 


acc aag gtg gaa atc aaa cga act gtg gct gca cca tct gtc ttc 


121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


 I   F   P   P   S   D   E   Q   L   K   S   G   T   A   S 


atc ttc ccg cca tct gat gag cag ttg aaa tct gga act gcc tct 


136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


 V   V   C   L   L   N   N   F   Y   P   R   E   A   K   V 


gtt gtg tcc ctg ctg aat aac ttc tat ccc aga gag gcc aaa gta 


151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


 Q   W   K   V   D   N   A   L   Q   S   G   N   S   Q   E 


cap tgg aag gtg gat aac gcc ctc caa tcg ggt aac tcc cag gag 


166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


 S   V   T   E   Q   D   S   K   D   S   T   Y   S   L   S 


agt gtc aca gag cag gac agc aag gac agc acc tac agc ctc agc 


181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


 S   T   L   T   L   S   K   A   D   Y   E   K   H   K   V 


ago acc ctg acg ctg agc aaa gca gac tac gag aaa cac aaa gtc 


196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


 Y   A   C   E   V   T   H   Q   G   L   S   S   P   V   T 


tac gcc tac gaa gtc acc cat cag ggc ctg agc tcg cct gtc aca 


211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 


 K   S   F   N   K   G   E   C   K   G   E   F   A 


aag agc ttc aac aaa gga gag tgt aag ggc gaa ttc gc..... 
















TABLE 26





h3401-d8 KAPPA captured with CJ and BsmAI


(Nucleotide sequence is SEQ ID NO: 484; amino acid sequenceis SEQ ID NO: 485)















 1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


 S   A   Q   D   I   Q   M   T   Q   S   P   A   T   L   S 


aGT GCACaa gac atccag atgacc cagtct cct gcc acc ctg tct 


 ApaLI...Extender.........................agcc acc ! L25, L6, L20, L2, L16, A11 


                                          A GCC ACC CTG TCT ! L2 (SEQ ID NO: 483)


 16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


 V   S   P   G   E   R   A   T   L   S   C   R   A   S   Q 


gtg tct cca ggt gaa aga gcc acc ctc tcc tgc agg gcc agt cag 


GTG TCT CCA GGG GAA AGA GCC ACC CTC TCC TGC  !     L2 


 31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


 N   L   L   S   N   L   A   W   Y   Q   Q   K   P   G   Q 


act ctt ctc agc aac tta gcc tgg tac cag cag aaa cct agc cag 


 46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


 A   P   R   L   L   I   Y   G   A   S   T   G   A   I   G 


gct ccc agg ctc ctc ctc tat ggt gct tcc acc ggg gcc att ggt 


 61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


 I   P   A   R   F   S   G   S   G   S   G   T   E   F   T 


atc cca gcc agg ttc agt ggc agt ggg tct ggg aca gag ttc act 


 76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


 L   T   I   S   S   L   Q   S   E   D   F   A   V   Y   F 


ctc acc ctc agc agc ctg cag tot gaa gat ttt gcc gtg tat ctc 


 91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


 C   Q   Q   Y   G   T   S   P   P   T   F   G   G   G   T 


tgt cag cag tat ggt acc tca ccg ccc act ttc ggc gga ggg acc


106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


 K   V   E   I   K   R   T   V   A   A   P   S   V   F   I 


aag gtg gaa ate aaa cga act gtg gct gca cca tct gtc ttc atc 


121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


 F   P   P   S   D   E   Q   L   K   S   G   T   A   S   V 


ttc ccg ccs tct gat gag cag ttg aaa tct gga act gcc tct gtt 


136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


 V   C   P   L   N   N   F   Y   P   R   E   A   K   V   Q 


gtg tgc ccg ctg aat aac ttc tat ccc agc gag gcc aaa gc cag 


151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


 W   K   V   D   N   A   L   Q   S   G   N   S   Q   E   S 


tgg aag gtg gat aac gcc ctc caa tcg ggt aac tcc cag gag agt 


166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


 V   T   E   Q   D   N   K   D   S   T   Y   S   L   S   S 


gtg acc gag cag gac aac aag gcc agc acc tac agc ctc age agc


181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


 T   L   T   L   S   K   V   D   Y   F   K   H   E   V   Y 


acc ctg acg ccg agc aaa gta gac tac gag aaa cac gaa gtc tac 


196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


 A   C   E   V   T   H   Q   G   L   S   S   P   V   T   K 


gcc tgc gaa gtc acc cat cag ggc ctt agc tcg ccc gtc acg aag


211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 


 S   F   N   R   C   E   C   K   K   E   F   V 


agc ttc aac agg gga gag tgt aag aaa gaa ttc gtt t 
















TABLE 27





V3-23 VH framework with variegated codons shown 


(Nucleotide sequence is SEQ ID NO: 486; aminoacid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 487)















                               17  13  19  20  21  22 


                                A   Q   P   A   M   A 


             5′-ctg tct gaacGGCC cagccGGCC atggcc     29 


             3′-gac aga ctt gc cgg gtc ggc cgg tac cgg 


                Scab.........SfiI............. 


                                     NgoMI... 


                                            NcoI.... 


                                FR1(DP47/V3-23)--------------- 


                                23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


                                 E   V   Q   L   L   E   S   G 


                                gaa|gtt|CAA|TTG|tta|gag|tct|ggt|      53 


                                ctt|caa|gtt|aac|aat|ctc|aga|cca|


                                       | MfeI  |


     -------------FR1-------------------------------------------- 


     31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


      G   G   L   V   Q   P   G   G   S   L   R   L   S   C   A 


    |ggc|ggt|ctt|gtt|cag|cct|ggt|ggt|tct|tta|cgt|ctt|tct|tgc|gct|     98 


    |ccg|cca|gaa|caa|gtc|gga|cca|cca|aga|aat|gca|gaa|aga|acg|cga|


    Sites to be varied --->      ***     ***     *** 


    ----FR1---------------->|...CDR1................|---FR2------ 


     46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


      A   S   G   F   T   F   S   S   Y   A   M   S   W   V   R 


    |gct|TCC|GGA|ttc|act|ttc|tct|tCG|TAC|Gct|atg|tct|tgg|gtt|cgC|    143 


    |cga|agg|cct|aag|tga|aag|aga|agc|atc|cga|tac|aga|acc|caa|gcg|


        | BspEI |                 | BsiWI|                     |BstXI. 


                          Sites to be varies---> ***     *** *** 


     -------FR2-------------------------------->|...CDR2......... 


     61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


      Q   A   P   G   K   G   L   E   W   V   S   A   I   S   G   


    |CAa|gct|ccT|GGt|aaa|ggt|ttg|gag|tgg|gtt|tct|gct|atc|tct|ggt|    188 


    |gtt|cga|gga|cca|ttt|cca|aac|ctc|acc|caa|aga|cga|tag|aga|cca|


...BstXI          |


                 ***     ***





   .....CDR2............................................|---FR3--- 


     76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


      S   G   G   S   T   Y   Y   A   D   S   V   K   G   R   F 


    |tct|ggt|ggc|agt|act|tac|tat|gct|gac|tcc|gtt|aaa|ggt|cgc|ttc|    233 


    |aga|cca|ccg|tca|tga|atg|ata|cga|ctg|agg|caa|ttt|cca|gcg|aag|


    --------FR3-------------------------------------------------- 


      91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


      T   I   S   R   D   N   S   K   N   T   L   Y   L   Q   M 


    |act|atc|TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|    278 


    |tga|tag|aga|tct|ctg|ttg|aga|ttc|tta|tga|gag|atg|aac|gtc|tac|


            | XbaI  |


    ---FR3----------------------------------------------------->|


     106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


      N   S   L   R   A   E   D   T   A   V   Y   Y   C   A   K 


    |aac|agC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgc|gct|aaa|    323 


    |ttg|tcg|aat|tcc|cga|ctc|ctg|tga|cgt|cag|atg|ata|acg|cga|ttt|


           |AflII                 | PstI |


    .......CDR3.................|----FR4------------------------- 


     121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


      D   Y   E   G   T   G   Y   A   F   D   I   W   G   Q   G 


    |gac|tat|gaa|ggt|act|ggt|tat|gct|ttc|gaC|ATA|TGg|ggt|caa|ggt|    368 


    |ctg|ata|ctt|cca|tga|cca|ata|cga|aag|ctg|tat|acc|cca|gtt|cca|


                                           | NdeI |


    --------------FR4---------->|


     136 137 138 139 140 141 142 


      T   M   V   T   V   S   S 


    |act|atG|GTC|ACC|gtc|tct|agt-      339 


    |tga|tac|cag|tgg|cag|aga|tca-


           | BstEII |


                      143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 


                       A   S   T   K   G   P   S   V   F   P 


                      gcc tcc acc aaG GGC CCa tcg GTC TTC ccc-3′     419 


                      cgg agg tggttc ccgggt agccag aagggg-5′


                                    Bsp120I.      BbsI...(2/2) 


                                    ApaI.... 


(SFPRMET) 5′-ctg tct gaa cG GCC cag ccG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 488) 


(TOPFR1A) 5′-ctg tct gaa cG GCC cag ccG GCC atg gcc-


             gaa|gtt|CAA|TTG|tta|gag|tct|ggt|- 


            |ggc|ggt|ctt|gtt|cag|cct|ggt|ggt|tct|tta-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 489) 


(BOTFR1B)             3′-caa|gtc|gga|cca|cca|aga|aat|gca|gaa|aga|acg|cga|- 


            |cga|agg|cct|aag|tga|aag-5′ bottom strand (SEQ ID NO:  490) 


(BOTER2) 3′-acc|caa|gcg|- 


            |gtt|cga|gga|cca|ttt|cca|aac|ctc|acc|caa|aga|-5′ ! bottom strand 


(SEQ ID NO: 491) 


(BOTFR3) 3′-   a|cga|ctg|agg|caa|ttt|cca|gcg|aag|- 


            |tga|tag|aga|tct|ctg|ttg|aga|ttc|tta|tga|gag|atg|aac|gtc|tac|- 


        |ttg|tcg|aat|tcc|cga|ctc|ctg|tga-5′ (SEQ ID NO: 492) 


(F06)      5′-gC|TTA|AGg|gct|gag|gac|aCT|GCA|Gtc|tac|tat|tgc|gct|aaa|- 


       |gac|tat|gaa|ggt|act|ggt|tat|gct|ttc|gaC|ATA|TGg|ggt|c-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 493) 


(BOTFR4)  3′-cga|aag|ctg|tat|acc|cca|gtt|cca|- 


            |tga|tac|cag|tgg|cag|aga|tca- 


                cggagg tggttc ccgggt agc cag aag ggg-5′ ! bottom strand (SEQ ID 


NO: 494) 


(BOTPRCPRIM)          3′-ggttc ccgggt agc cag aag ggg-5′ (SEQ ID NO: 495) 


  CDR1 diversity 


(ON-vgC1)   5′-|gct|TCC|GGA|ttc|act|ttc|tct|<1>|TAC|<1>|atg|<1>|-


                                        CDR1...................6859 


               |tgg|gtt|cgC|CAa|gct|ccT|GG-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 496) 


 <1> stands for an equimolar mix of (ADEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY); no C 


                                   (this is not a sequence) 


  CDR2 diversity 


(ON-vgC2) 5′-ggt|ttg|gag|tgg|gtt|tct|<2>|atc|<2>|<3>|- 


                                     CDR2............


              |tct|ggt|ggc|<1>|act|<1>|tat|gct|gac|tcc|gtt|aaa|gg-3′


(SEQ ID NO: 497) 


              CDP2................................................


  <1> is an equimolar mixture of {ADEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY}; no C 


  <2> is an equimolar mixture of {YRWVGS}; no ACDEFHIKLMNPQT 


  <3> is an equimolar mixture of {PS}; no ACDEFGHIKLMNQRTVWY 
















TABLE 28 





Stuffer used in VH (SEQ ID NO: 498)
















1
TCCGGAGCTT CAGATCTGTT TGCCTTTTTG TGGGGTGGTG CAGATCGCGT TACGGAGATC





61
GACCGACTGC TTGAGCAAAA GCCACGCTTA ACTGCTGATC AGGCATGGGA TGTTATTCGC





121
CAAACCAGTC GTCAGGATCT TAACCTGAGG CTTTTTTTAC CTACTCTGCA AGCAGCGACA





181
TCTGGTTTGA CACAGAGCGA TCCGCGTCGT CAGTTGGTAG AAACATTAAC ACGTTGGGAT





241
GGCATCAATT TGCTTAATGA TGATGGTAAA ACCTGGCAGC AGCCAGGCTC TGCCATCCTG





301
AACGTTTGGC TGACCAGTAT GTTGAAGCGT ACCGTAGTGG CTGCCGTACC TATGCCATTT





361
GATAAGTGGT ACAGCGCCAG TGGCTACGAA ACAACCCAGG ACGGCCCAAC TGGTTCGCTG





421
AATATAAGTG TTGGAGCAAA AATTTTGTAT GAGGCGGTGC AGGGAGACAA ATCACCAATC





481
CCACAGGCGG TTGATCTGTT TGCTGGGAAA CCACAGCAGG AGGTTGTGTT GGCTGCGCTG





541
GAAGATACCT GGGAGACTCT TTCCAAACGC TATGGCAATA ATGTGAGTAA CTGGAAAACA





601
CCTGCAATGG CCTTAACGTT CCGGGCAAAT AATTTCTTTG GTGTACCGCA GGCCGCAGCG





661
GAAGAAACGC GTCATCAGGC GGAGTATCAA AACCGTGGAA CAGAAAACGA TATGATTGTT





721
TTCTCACCAA CGACAAGCGA TCGTCCTGTG CTTGCCTGGG ATGTGGTCGC ACCCGGTCAG





781
AGTGGGTTTA TTGCTCCCGA TGGAACAGTT GATAAGCACT ATGAAGATCA GCTGAAAATG





841
TACGAAAATT TTGGCCGTAA GTCGCTCTGG TTAACGAAGC AGGATGTGGA GGCGCATAAG





901
GAGTCGTCTA GA
















TABLE 29 





DNA sequence of pCES5 















 pCES5 6680 bases = pCes4 with stuffersin CDR1-2and CDR3 2000.12.13 


 vNgene = 6680 


 Useful REs (cut MAnoLI fewer than 3 times) 2000.06.05 


 Non-cutters 


Acc65I Ggtacc         AfeI AGCgct         AvaII Cctagg 


BsaBI GATNNnnatc      BsiWI Cgtacg        BsmFI Nnnnnnnnnnnnnnngtccc 


(SEQ ID NO: 499)                 (SEQ ID NO: 500) 


BsrGI Tgtaca          BstAPI GCANNNNntgc  BstBI TTcgaa 


            (SEQ ID NO: 501) 


BstZ17I GTAtac        BtrI CACgtg         Ecl136I GAGctc 


EcoRV GATatc          FseI GGCCGGcc       KpnI GGIACc 


MscI TGGcca           NruI TCGcga         NsiI ATGCAt 


PacI TTAATtaa         PmeI GTTTaaac       PmlI CACgtg 


PpuMI RGgwccy         PshAI GACNNnngtc    SacI GAGCTc 


                   (SEQ ID NO: 502) 


SacII CCGCgg          SbfI CCTGCAgg       SexAI Accwggt 


SgfI GCGATcgc         SnaBI TACgta        SpeI Actagt 


SphI GCATGc           Sse8387I CCTGCAgg    StuI AGGcct 


SwaI ATTTaaat         XmaI Cccggg 





 cutters 


 Enzymes that cut more than 3 times. 


AlwNI CAGNNNctg           5 


BsgT ctgcac               4 


BsrFI Rccggy              5


EarI CTCTTCNnnn           4 


(SEQ ID NO: 625) 


FauI nNNNNNNGCGGG        10 


 (SEQ ID NO: 503) 


 Enzymes that cutfrom 1 to 3 times. 


EcoO109I RGgnccy          3     7   2636   4208 


BssSI Ctcgtg              1    12 


-″- Cacgag                1  1703 


BspHI Tcatqa              3    43    148   1156 


AatII GACGTc              1    65 


BciVI GTATCCNNNNNN        2   140   1667 


  (SEQ ID NO: 504) 


Eco57I CTGAAG             1   301 


-″-    cttcag             2  1349 


AvaI Cycgrg               3   319   2347   6137 


BsiHKAI GWGCWc            3   401   2321   4245 


HgiAI GWGCWc              3   401   2321   4245 


BcgI gcannnnnntcg         1   461 


  (SEQ ID NO: 505) 


ScaI AGTact               1   505 


PvuI CGATcg               3   616   3598   5926 


FspI TGCgca               2   763   5946 


BglI GCCNNNNnggc          3   864   2771   5952 


  (SEQ ID NO: 506) 


BpmI CTGGAG               1   398 


-″-  ctccag               1  4413 


BsaI GGTCTCNnnnn          1   916 


  (SEQ ID NO: 507) 


AhdI GACNNNnngtc          1   983 


  (SEQ ID NO: 508) 


Eaml105I GACNNNnngtc      1   983 


  (SEQ ID NO: 509) 


DrdI GACNNNNnngtc         3  1768   6197   6579 


  (SEQ ID NO: 510) 


SapI gaagagc              1  1998 


PvuII CAGctg              3  2054   3689   5896 


PflMI CCANNNNntgg         3  2233   3943   3991 


  (SEQ ID NO: 511) 


HindIII Aagctt            1  2235 


ApaLI Gtgcac              1  2321 


BspMT Nnnnnnnnngcaggt     1  2328 


  (SEQ ID NO: 512) 


-″-   ACCTGCNNNNn         2  3460 


  (SEQ ID NO: 513) 


PstI CTGCAg               1  2335 


AccI GTmkac               2  2341   2611 


HincII GTYrac             2  2341   3730 


SalI Gtcgac               1  2341 


TliI Ctcgag               1  2347 


XhoI Ctcgag               1  2347 


BbsI gtcttc               2  2363   4219 


BlpI GCtnagc              1  2580 


EspI GCtnagc              1  2580 


SgrAI CRccggyg            1  2648 


AgeI Accggt               2  2649   4302 


AscI GGcgcgcc             1  2689 


BssHII Gcgcgc             1  2690 


SfiI GGCCNNNNnggcc        1  2770 


  (SEQ ID NO: 514) 


NaeI GCCggc               2  2776   6349 


NgoMIV Gccggc             2  2776   6349 


BtgT Ccrygg               3  2781   3553   5712 


DsaI Ccrygg               3  2781   3553   5712 


NcoI Ccatgg               1  2781 


StyI Ccwwgg               3  2761   4205   4472 


MfeI Caattg               1  2795 


BspEI Tccgga              1  2861 


Bg1II Agatct              1  2872 


Bc1I Tgatca               1  2956 


Bsu36I CCtnagg            3  3004   4143   4373 


XcmI CCANNNNNnnnntgg      1  3215 


  (SEQ ID NO: 515) 


MluI Acgcgt               1  3527 


HpaI GTTaac               1  3730 


XbaI Tctaga               1  3767 


Af1II Cttaag              1  3811 


HsmI NGcattc              1  3821 


-″-  GAATGCN              1  4695 


RsrII CGgwccg             1  3827 


NheI Gctagc               1  4166 


BstEII Ggtnacc            1  4182 


BsmBI CGTOTCNnnnn         2  4188   6625 


  (SEQ ID NO: 516) 


-″-   Nnnnnngagacg        1  6673 


  (SEQ ID NO: 517) 


ApaI GGGCCc               1  4209 


BanII GRGCYc              3  4209   4492   6319 


Bsp120I Gggccc            1  4209 


PspOMI Gggccc             1  4209 


BseRI NNnnnnnnnnctcctc    1  4226 


  (SEQ ID NO:  518) 


-″- GAGGAGNNNNNNNNNN      1  4957 


  (SEQ ID NO:  519) 


EcoNI CCTNNnnnagg         1  4278 


  (SEQ ID NO:  520) 


Pf1FI GACNnngtc           1  4308 


Tth111I GACNnngtc         1  4308 


KasI Ggcgcc               2  4327   5967 


BstXI CCANNNNNntgg        1  4415 


  (SEQ ID NO:  521) 


NotI GCggccgc             1  4507 


EagT Cggccg               1  4508 


BamHI Ggatcc              1  5169 


BspDI ATcgat              1  5476 


NdeI CAtatg               1  5672 


EcoRI Gaattc              1  5806 


PsiI TTAtaa               1  6118 


DraIII CACNNNgtg          1  6243 


EsaAI YACgtr              1  6246 


----------------------------------------------------------------------------


(Nucleotide sequence is SEQ ID NO: 522; amino acid sequence is  


SEQ ID NO: 523, respectively)


    1     gacgaaaggg cCTCGTGata cgcctatttt tataggttaa tgtcatgata ataatggttt 


                      BssSI.(1/2) 


   61     cttaGACGTC aggtggcact tttcggggaa atgtgcgogg aacccctatt tgtttatttt 


              AatII. 


  121     tctaaataca ttcaaatatG TATCCgctca tgagacaata accctgataa atgcttcaat 


                              BciVI..(1 of 2) 


  181     aatattgaaa aaggaagagt 


 Base #  201 to 1061 = ApR genefrom pUC119 with some RE sites removed 


            1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


          fM   S   I   Q   H   F   R   V   A   L   I   P   F   F   A 


  201     atg agt att caa cat ttc cgt gtc gcc ctt att ccc ttt ttt gcg 


           16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


           A   F   C   L   P   V   F   A   H   P   E   T   L   V   K 


  246     gca ttt tgc ctt cct gtt ttt gct cac cca gaa acg ctg gtg aaa 


           31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


           V   K   D   A   E   D   Q   L   G   A   R   V   G   Y   I 


  291     gta aaa gat gct gaa gat cag ttg ggt gcc cga gtg ggt tac atc 


           46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


           E   L   D   L   N   S   G   K   I   L   K   S   F   R   P 


  336     gaa ctg gat ctc aac agc ggt aag atc ctt gag agt ttt cgc ccc 


           61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


           E   E   R   F   P   M   M   S   T   F   K   V   L   L   C 


  381     gaa gaa cgt ttt cca atg atg agc act ttt aaa gtt ctg cta tgt 


           76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


           G   A   V   L   S   R   I   D   A   G   Q   E   Q   L   G 


  426     ggc gcg gta tta tcc cgt att gac gcc ggg caa gaG CAa ctc ggT 


                                                        BcgI............ 


           91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


           F   R   I   H   Y   S   Q   N   U   L   V   E   Y   S   P 


  471     CGc cgc ata cac tat tct cag aat gac ttg gtt gAG TAC Tca cca 


..BcgI......                                           ScaI.... 


          106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


           V   T   E   K   H   L   T   D   G   M   T   V   R   E   L 


  516     gtc aca gaa aag cat ctt acg gat ggc atg aca gta aga gaa tta 


          121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


           C   S   A   A   I   T   M   S   D   N   T   A   A   N   L 


  561     tgc agt gct gcc ata acc atg agt gat aac act gcg gcc aac tta 


          136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


           L   L   T   T   I   G   G   P   K   E   S   T   A   F   L 


  606     ctt ctg aca aCG ATC Gga gga ccg aag gag cta acc gct ttt ttg 


                       PvuI.... (1/2) 


          151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


           H   N   M   G   D   H   V   T   P   L   D   R   W   E   P 


  651     cac aac atg ggg gat cat gta act cgc ctt gat cgt tgg gaa ccg 


          166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


           E   L   N   K   A   I   P   N   D   E   R   D   T   T   M 


  696     gag ctg aat gaa gcc ata cca aac gac gag cgt gac acc acg atg 


          181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


           P   V   A   M   A   T   T   L   R   K   S   S   T   G   E 


  741     cct gta GCA ATG gca aca acg tTG CGS Aaa cta tta act ggc gaa 


             BsrDI..(1/2) FspT (1/2) 


          196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


           L   L   T   L   A   S   R   Q   Q   S   I   D   W   M   E 


  786     cta ctt act cta gct tcc cgg caa caa tta ata gac tgg atg gag 


          211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 


           A   D   K   V   A   G   P   L   L   R   S   A   S   P   A 


  831     gcg gat aaa gtt gca gga cca ctt ctg cgc tcg gcc ctt ccg gct 


          226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 


           G   W   F   I   A   D   K   S   G   A   G   E   R   G   S 


  876     ggc tgg ttt att gct gat aaa tCT GGA Gcc ggt gag cgt gGG TCT 


                                       BpmI....(1/2)           BsaI.... 


          241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 


           R   G   I   I   A   A   L   G   P   D   G   K   P   S   K 


  921     Cgc ggt atC ATT GCa gca ctg ggg cca gat ggt aag ccc tcc cgt 


BsaI.......         BsrDI...(2/2) 


          256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 


           I   V   V   I   Y   T   T   G   S   Q   A   T   M   D   E 


  966     atc gta gtt atc tac acG ACg ggg aGT Cag gca act atg gat gaa 


                                AhdI...........


          271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 


           K   N   R   Q   T   A   K   I   G   A   S   S   I   K   H 


 1011     cga aat aga cag atc gct gag ata ggt gcc tca ctg att aag cat 


          286 287 


           W   . 


 1056     tgg taa 


 1062                                                  ctgtcagac caagtttact 


 1081     catatatact ttagattgat ttaaaacttc atttttaatt taaaaggatc taggtgaaga 


 1141     tcctttttga taatctcatg accaaaatcc cttaacgtga gttttcgttc cactgagcgt 


 1201     cagaccccgt agaaaagatc aaaggatctt cttgagatcc tttttttctg cgcgtaatct 


 1261     gctgcttgca aacaaaaaaa ccaccgctac cagcggtggt ttgtttgccg gatcaagagc 


 1321     taccaactct ttttccgaag gtaactggct tcagcagagc gcagatacca aatactgtcc 


 1381     ttctagtgta gccgtagtta ggccaccact tcaagaactc tgtagcaccg cctacatacc 


 1441     tcgctctgct aatcctgtta ccagtggctg ctgccagtgg cgataagtcg tgtcttaccg 


 1501     ggttggactc aagacgatag ttaccggata aggcgcagcg gtcgggctga acggggggtt 


 1561     cgtgcataca gcccagcttg gagcgaacga cctacaccga actgagatac ctacagcgtg 


 1621     agcattgaga aagcgccacg cttcccgaag ggagaaaggc ggacagGTAT CCggtaagcg 


                                                            BciVI.. (2 of 2) 


 1681     gcagggtcgg aacaggagag ogOACGAGgg agottcoagg gggaaaogco tggtatcttt 


                                  BssSI.(2/2) 


 1741     atagtcctgt cgggtttcgc cacctctgac ttgagcgtcg atttttgtga tgetcgtcag 


 1801     gggggcggag cctatggaaa aacgccagca acgoggcctt tttacggttc ctggcctttt 


 1861     gotggocttt tgotcACATG Ttctttcctg cgttatoccc tgattctgtg gataaccgta 


                          PoiI... 


 1921     ttaccgcctt tgagtgagct gataccgbtc gccgcagccg aacgaccgag cgcagbgagt 


 1981     cagtgagcga ggaagogGAA GAGCgcccaa tacgcaaacc gcctctocco gogegttggo 


                            SapI..... 


 2041     cgattcatta atgOAGCTGg cacgacaggt ttcccgactg gaaagogggc agtgagcgca 


                        PvuII.(1/3) 


 2101     acgcaatTAA TGTgagttag ctcactcatt aggbacccca ggoTTTACAc tttatgottc 


                 ..-35..         Plac                    ..-10. 


 2161     cggctcgtat gttgtgtgga attgtgagcg gataacaatt tcacaCAGGA AACAGCTATG 


                                                           M13Rev_seg_primer 


 2221     ACcatgatta cgCCAAGCTT TGGagccttt tttttggaga ttttcaac 


                       Pf1MI....... 


                         Hind3. 


 signal::linker::CLight 


           1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


          fM   K   K   L   L   F   A   I   P   L   V   V   P   F   Y  


(Amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 524)


 2269     gtg aaa aaa tta tta ttc gca att cct tta gtt gtt cct ttc tat 


                            Linker.............................. End of FR4 


           16  17  18  19     20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


           S   H   S   A      Q   V   Q   L   Q   P   D   L   E   I   K 


 2314     tct cac aGT GCA    Cag gtc caa CTG CAG GTC GAC CTC GAG atc aaa 


                   ApaLI......           PstI...         XhoI... 


                                           BspMI... 


                                                 SalI... 


                                                 AccI...(1/2) 


                                                 HincII.(1/2) 


Vlight domains could be cloned in as ApaLI-XhoI fragments. 


VL-CL(kappa) segments can be cloned in as ApaLI-AscI fragments. <-------


Ckappa 


           31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


           R   G   T   V   A   A   P   S   V   F   I   F   P   P   S 


 2359     cgt gga act gtg gct gca cca tct GTC TTC atc ttc ccg cca tct 


                                          BbsI...(1/2) 


           46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


           D   E   Q   L   K   S   G   T   A   S   V   V   C   L   L 


 2404     gat gag cag ttg aaa tct gga act gcc tct gtt gtg tgc ctg ctg 


           61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


           N   N   F   Y   P   R   E   A   K   V   Q   W   K   V   D 


 2449     aat aac ttc tat ccc aga gag gcc aaa gta cag tgg aag gtg gat 


           76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


           N   A   L   Q   S   G   N   S   Q   E   S   V   T   E   Q 


 2494     aac gcc ctc caa tcg ggt aac tcc cag gag agt gtc aca gag cag 


           91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


           D   S   K   D   S   T   Y   S   L   S   S   T   L   T   L 


 2539     gac agc aag gac agc acc tac agc ctc agc agc acc ctg acG CTG 


                                                                EspI...                                


          106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


           S   K   A   D   Y   E   K   H   K   V   Y   A   C   E   V 


 2584     AGC aaa gca gac tac gag aaa cac aaa GTC TAC gcc tgc gaa gtc 


  ...Espi....                                 AccI...(2/2) 


          121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


           T   H   Q   G   L   S   S   P   V   T   K   S   F   N   R 


 2629     acc cat cag ggc ctg agt tcA CCG GTg aca aag agc ttc aac agg 


                                    AgeI....(1/2) 


          136 137 138 139 140 


           G   E   C   .   . 


 2674     gga gag tgt taa taa   GG CGCGCCaatt 


                                AscI.....


                                 BssHIT. 


 2701     ctatttodag gagacagtca ta 


 PelB::3-23(stuffed)::CH1::III fusion gene 


            1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


           M   K   Y   L   L   P   T   A   A   A   G   L   L   L   L  


(Amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO:  525)


 2723     atg aaa Tac cta ttg cct ccg gca gcc gct gga ttg tta tta ctc 


         16  17  18  19  20  21  22 


         A   A   Q   P   A   M   A 


 2768   gcG GCC cag ccG GCC atg gcc 


          SfiI............. 


                  NgoMIV..(1/2) 


                         NcoI.... 


                                   FR1(DP47/V3-23)--------------- 


                                   23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


                                    E   V   Q   L   L   E   S   G 


 2789                              gaa|gtt|CAA|TTG|tta|gag|tct|ggt|


                                          | MfeI  |


       --------------FR1-------------------------------------------- 


        31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


         G   G   L   V   Q   P   G   G   S   L   R   L   S   C   A 


 2813  |ggc|ggt|ctt|gtt|cag|cct|ggt|ggt|tct|tta|cgt|ctt|tct|tgc|gct|


       ----FR1----- 


        46  47  48 


         A   S   G 


 2858  |gct|TCC|GGA|


           | BspEI |


          Stuffer for CDR1, FR2, and CDR2----------------------------->


          There areno stop codons in this stuffer. 


 2867                                                 gcttcAGATC Tgtttgcctt 


                                                           BglII.. 


 2887     tttgtggggt ggtgcagatc gcgttacgga gatcgaccga ctgcttgagc aaaagccacg 


 2947     cttaactgcT GATCAggcat gggatgttat tcgccaaacc agtcgtcagg atcttaacct 


                   BclI... 


 3007     gaggcttttt ttacctactc tgcaagcagc gacatctggt ttgacacaga gcgatccgcg 


 3067     tcgtcagttg gtagaaccat taacacgttg ggatggcatc aatttgctta atgatgatgg 


 3127     taaaacctgg cagcagccag gctctgccat cctgaacgtt tggctgacca gtatgttgaa 


 3187     gcgtaccgta gtggctgccg tacctatgCC Atttgataag TGGtacagcg ccagtggcta 


                                        XcmI.............


 3247     cgaaacaacc caggacggcc caactggttc gctgaatata agtgttggag caaaaatttt 


 3307     gtatgaggcg gtgcagggag acaaatcacc aatcccacag gcggttgatc tgtttgctgg 


 3367     gaaaccacag caggaggttg tgttggctgc gctggaagat acctgggaga ctctttccaa 


 3427     acgctatggc aataatgtga gtaactggaa aacacctgca atggccttaa cgttccgggc 


 3487     aaataatttc tttggtgtac cgcaggccgc agcggaagaa ACGCGTcatc aggcggagta 


                                                      MluI.. 


 3547     tcaaaaccgt ggaacagaaa acgatatgat tgttttctca ccaacgacaa gcgatcgtcc 


 3607     tgtgcttgcc tgggatgtgg tcgcacccgg tcagagtggg tttattgctc ccgatggaac 


 3667     agttgataag cactatgaag atcagctgaa aatgtacgaa aattttggcc gtaagtcgct 


                                  PvuII. 


 3727     ctgGTTAACg aagcaggatg tggaggcgca taaggagtcg 


             HpaI.. 


             HincII(2/2) 


       --------FR3-------------------------------------------------- 


                 4   5   6   7   8   9   10  11  12  13  14  15  16 


                 93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


                 S   R   D   N   S   K   N   T   L   Y   L   O   M  


(Amino acid sequenceis SEQ ID NO: 526)


 3767          |TCT|AGA|gac|aac|tct|aag|aat|act|ctc|tac|ttg|cag|atg|


               | XbaI  |


       ---FR3----------------------------------------------------->|


         17  18  19  20 


        106 107 108 109 


         N   S   L   s    l   s   i   r   s   g 


 3806  |aac|agC|TTA|AG t ctg agc att CGG TCC G 


              |AflII |               RsrII.. 


              q   h   s   p   t   . 


 3834     gg caa cat tct cca aac tga ccagacga cacaaacggc 


 3872     ttacgctaaa tcccgcgcat gggatggtaa agaggtggcg tctttgctgg cctggactca 


 3932     tcagatgaag gccaaaaatt ggcaggagtg gacacagcag gcagcgaaac aagcactgac 


 3992     catcaactgg tactatgctg atgtaaacgg caatattggt tatgttcata ctggtgatta 


 4052     tccagatcgt caatcaggcc atgatccgcg attacccgtt cctggtacgg gaaaatggga 


 4112     ctggaaaggg ctattgcctt ttgaaatgaa ccctaaggtg tataaccccc ag 


 4164           aa GCTAGC ctgog gcttc 


                   NheI.. 


: 


 4182     G|GTC|ACC|                                      gtc tca agc 


         | BstEII |


      (Amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 527) 


          136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


           A   S   T   K   G   P   S   V   F   P   L   A   P   S   S 


 4198     gcc tcc acc aag ggc cca tcg gtc ttc ccc ctg gca ccc tcc tcc 


          151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


           K   S   T   S   G   G   T   A   A   L   G   C   L   V   K 


 4243     aag agc acc tct ggg ggc aca gcg gcc ctg ggc tgc ctg gtc aag 


          166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


           D   Y   F   P   E   P   V   T   V   S   W   N   S   G   A 


 4288     gac tac ttc ccc gaa ccg gtg acg gtg tcg tgg aac tca ggc gcc 


          181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


           L   T   S   G   V   H   T   E   P   A   V   L   Q   S   S 


 4333     ctg acc agc ggc gtc cac acc ttc ccg gct gtc cta cag tcc tca 


          196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


           G   L   Y   S   L   S   S   V   V   T   V   P   S   S   S 


 4378     gga ctc tac tcc ctc agc agc gta gtg acc gtg ccc tcc agc agc 


          211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 


           L   G   T   Q   T   Y   I   C   N   V   N   H   K   P   S 


 4423     ttg ggc acc cag acc tac atc tgc aac gtg aat cac aag ccc agc 


          226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 


           N   T   K   V   D   K   K   V   E   P   K   S   C 


 4468     aac acc aag gtg gac aaG AAA GTT GAG CCC AAA TCT TGT 


                                ON-TQHCforw...................... 


                                Poly His linker 


                    139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


                     A   A   A   H   H   H   H   H   H   G   A   A 


 4507               GCG GCC GCa cat cat cat cac cat cac ggg gcc gca 


                    NotI...... 


                     EagT.... 


        151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


         E   Q   K   L   I   S   E   E   D   L   N   G   A   A   . 


 4543   gaa caa aaa ctc atc tca gaa gag gat ctg aat ggg gcc gca tag 


        Mature III------------------------------------------------>...


        166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


 4588    T   V   E   S   C   L   A   K   P   H   T   E   N   S   F 


        act gtt gaa agt tgt tta gca aaa cct cat aca gaa aat tca ttt 


        181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


         T   N   V   W   K   D   D   K   T   L   D   R   Y   A   N 


 4633   act aac gtc tgg aaa gac gac aaa act tta gat cgt tac gct aac 


        196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


         Y   E   G   C   L   W   N   A   T   G   V   V   V   C   T 


 4678   tat gag ggc tgt ctg tgG AAT GCt aca ggc gtt gtg gtt tgt act 


                             BsmI.... 


        211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 


 4723    G   D   F   T   Q   C   Y   G   T   W   V   P   I   G   L 


        ggt gac gaa act cag tgt tac ggt aca tgg gtt cct att ggg ctt 


        226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 


 4768    A   I   P   E   N   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S 


        gct atc cct gra aat gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct 


        241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 


         E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   T   K   P   P   E   Y 


 4813   gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc ggt act aaa cct cct gag tac 


        256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 


         G   H   T   P   I   P   G   Y   T   Y   I   N   P   L   D 


 4858   ggt gat aca cct att ccg ggc tat act tat atc aac cct ctc gac 


        271 272 273 274 277 275 276 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 


 4903    G   T   Y   P   P   G   T   E   Q   N   P   A   N   P   N 


        ggc cct tat ccg cct ggt act gag caa aac ccc gct act cct aat 


        286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 


         P   S   L   E   E   S   Q   P   L   N   T   F   M   F   Q 


 4948   cct tct ctt GAG GAG tct cag cct ctt act act ttc atg ttt cag 


                    BseRI..(2/2) 


        301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 


         N   N   R   F   R   N   R   Q   G   A   L   T   V   Y   T 


 4993   aat aat agg ttc cga cat agg cag ggt gca ttc act gtt tat acg 


        316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 


 5038    G   T   V   T   Q   G   T   D   P   V   K   T   Y   Y   Q 


        ggc act gtt act caa ggc act gac ccc gtt aaa act tat tac cag 


        331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 


         Y   T   P   V   S   S   K   A   N   Y   D   A   Y   W   N 


 5083   tac act cct gta tca tca aaa gcc atg tat gac gct tac tgg aac 


        346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 


         G   K   F   R   D   C   A   F   H   S   G   F   N   E   D 


 5128   ggt aaa ttc aga gac tgc gct ttc cat tct gcc ttt aat gaG GAT 


                                                              BamHI.. 


        361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 


         P   F   V   C   E   Y   Q   G   Q   S   S   D   L   P   Q 


 5173   CCa ttc gtt tgt gaa tat caa ggc caa tcg tct gAC CTG Cct cac 


  BamHI...                                           BspMI...(2/2) 


        376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 


 5218    P   P   V   N   A   G   G   G   S   G   G   G   S   G   G 


        cct cct gtc aat gct gcc ggc ggc tct ggt ggt ggt tct ggt ggc 


        391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 


 5263    G   S   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G 


        ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc 


        406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 


         G   S   E   G   G   G   S   G   G   G   S   G   S   G   D 


 5308   ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tcc ggt ggc ggc tcc ggt tcc ggt gat 


        421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 


 5353    F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N   K   G   A   M   T 


        ttt gat tat gaa aaa atg gca aac gct aat aag ggg gct atg acc 


        436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 


 5398    E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S   D   A   K   G   K 


        gaa aat gcc gat gaa aac gcg cta cap tct gac gct aaa ggc aaa 


        451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 


         L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A   A   I   D   G   F  


 5443   ctt gat tct gtc gct act gat tac ggt gct gct ATC GAT ggt ttc 


                                                    BspDi.. 


        466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 


         I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G   N   G   A   T   G 


 5488   att ggt gac gtt tcc ggc ctt gct aat ggt aat ggt gct act ggt 


        481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 


         P   F   A   G   S   N   S   Q   M   A   Q   V   G   D   G 


 5533   gat ttt gct ggc tct aat tcc caa atg gct caa gtc ggt gac ggt 


        496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 


         P   N   S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R   Q   Y   L   P   S 


 5578   gat aat tca cct tta atg aat aat ttc cgt caa tat tta cct tct 


        511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 


         S   P   Q   S   V   E   C   R   P   Y   V   F   G   A   G 


 5623   ttg cct cag tcg gtt gaa tgt cgc cct tat gtc ttt ggc gct ggt 


        526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 


         K   P   Y   E   F   S   I   D   C   D   K   I   N   L   F 


 5668   aaa cCA TAT Gaa ttt tct att pat tgt gac aaa ata aac tta ttc 


             NdeI.... 


        541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 


         R   G   V   F   A   F   S   L   Y   V   A   T   F   M   Y 


 5713   opt ggt gtc ttt gcg ttt ctt tta tat gtt gcc acc ttt atg tat 


        556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 


         V   F   S   T   F   A   N   I   S   R   N   K   E   S   . 


 5758   gta ttt tcg acg ttt gct aac ata ctg cgt aat aag gag tct taa 


        571 


         .


 5803   taa GAATTC 


            EcoRI. 


 5812      actggccgt cgttttacaa cgtcgtgact gggaaaaccc tggcgttacc caacttaatc 


 5871     gccttgcagc acatccccct ttcgccagct ggcgtaatag cgaagaggcc cgcacCGATC 


                                                                      PvuI.. 


 5931     Gcccttccca acagtTGCGC Agcctgaatg gcgaatGGCG CCtgatgcgg tattttctcc 


 ....PvuI... (3/3)        FspI... (2/2)          KasI...(2/2) 


 5991     ttacgcatct gtgcggtatt tcacaccgca tataaattgt aaacgttaat attttgttaa 


 6051     aattcgcgtt aaatttttgt taaatcagct cattttttaa ccaataggcg gaaatcggca 


 6111     aaatcccTTA TAAatcaaaa gaatagcccg agatagggtt gagtgttgtt ccagtttgga 


                 PsiI... 


 6171     acaagagtcc actattaaag aacgtggact ccaacgtcaa agggcgaaaa accgtctatc 


 6231     agggcgatgg ccCACtacGT Gaaccatcac ccaaatcaag ttttttgggg tcgaggtgcc 


                       DraIII.... 


 6291 gtaaagcact aaatcggaac cctaaaggga gcccccgatt tagagcttga cggggaaaGC 


                                                                     NgoMIV.. 


 6351     CGGCgaacgt ggcgagaaag gaagggaaga aagcgaaagg agcgggcgct agggcgctgg 


     ..NgoMIV.(2/2) 


 6411     caagtgtagc ggtcacgctg cgcgtaacca ccacacccgc cgcgcttaat gcgccgctac 


 6471     agggcgcgta ctatggttgc tttgacgggt gcagtctcag tacaatctgc tctgatgccg 


 6531     catagttaag ccagccccga cacccgccaa cacccgctga cgcgccctga cgggcttgtc 


 6591     tgctcccggc atccgcttac agacaagctg tgaccgtctc cgggagctgc atgtgtcaga 


 6651     ggttttcacc gtcatcaccg aaacgcqcga 
















TABLE 30 





Oligonucleotides used to clone CDR1/2 diversity















1) ON_CD1Bsp, 30 bases (SEQ ID NO: 528)


A c c T c A c T g  g  c  T  T  c  c  g  g  A


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18


 T  T  c  A  c  T  T  T  c  T  c  T


19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30





2) ON_Br12, 42 bases (SEQ ID NO: 529)


A g A A A c c c A  c  T  c  c  A  A  A  c  c


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18


 T  T  T  A  c  c  A  g  g  A  g  c  T  T  a  g  


19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 


 c  g A  A  c  c  c  A


35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42





3) ON_CD2Xba, 51 bases (SEQ ID NO: 530)


g g A A g g c A g  T  g  A  T  c  T  A  g  A


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18


 g  A  T  A  g  T  g  A  A  a  c  g  A  c  c  T  


19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 


 T  T  A  A  c  g  g  A  g  T  c  A  g  c  A  T  A


35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51





4) ON_BotXba, 23 bases (SEQ ID NO: 531)


g A A g g c A g  T  g  A  T  c  T  A  g  A


2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18


 g  A  T  A  g


19 20 21 22 23





All sequences are 5′ to 3′.













TABLE 31 





Bridge/Extender Oligonucleotides

















ON_Lam1aBi(rc)
........................GTGCTGACTCAGCCACCCTC.
20





ON_Lam2aB7(rc)
 .......................GCCCTGACTCAGCCTGCCTC.
20





ON_Lam31B7(rc)
  ......................GAGCTGACTCAGG.ACCCTGC
20





ON_Lam3rB7(rc)
 .......................GAGCTGAnTCAGCCACCCTC.
20





ON_LamHf1cBrg(rc)
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGTCTTGACTCAGCC.......
38





ON_LamHf1cExt
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCAnAGAGCGTCTTG...............
30





ON_LamHf2b2Brq(rc)
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGCTTTGACTCAGCC.......
38





ON_LamHf2b2Ext
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGCTTTG...............
30





ON_LamHf2dBrq(rc)
CCTCGACAGCTAAGTGCACAGAGCGCTTTGACTCAGCC.......
38





ON_LamHt2dExt
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGCTTTG...............
30





ON_LamHf31Brg(rc)
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGAATTGACTCAGCC.......
38





ON_LamHf31Ext
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGAGCGAATTG...............
30





ON_LamEt3rBrg(rc)
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCAnAGTACGAATTGACTCAGCC.......
38





ON_LamHf3rExt
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAGTACGAATTG...............
30





ON_lamPlePCR
CCTCGACAGCGAAGTGCACAG........................
21


Consensus





(SEQ ID NOs: 532-546, respectively in order of appearance)













TABLE 32 





Oligonucleotides used to make SSDNA locally


double-stranded
















Adapters (8)



H43HF3.1?02#1
5′-cc gtg tat tac tgt gcg 



aga g-3′


H43.77.97.1-03#2
5′-ct gtg tat tac tgt gcg 



aga g-3′


543.77.97.323#22
5′-cc gta tat tac tgt gcg 



aaa g-3′


H43.77.97.330#23
5′-ct gtg tat tac tgt gcg 



aaa g-3′


H43.77.97.439#44
5′-ct gtg tat tac tgt gcg 



aga c-3′


H43.77.97.551#48
5′-cc atg tat tac tgt gcg 



aga c-3′





(SEQ ID NOs: 548-552, respectively in order of appearance)













TABLE 33 





Bridge/extender pairs















Bridges (2)


H43.XABr1


5′ggtgtagtgaTCTAGtgacaactctaagaatactctctacttgcagat


gaacagCTTtAGggctgaggacaCTGCAGtctactattgtgogaga-3′


(SEQ ID NO: 553)





H43.XABr2


5′ggtgtagtgaTCTAGtgacaactctaagaatactctctacttgcagat


gaacagCTTtAGggctgaggacaCTGCAGtctactattgtgcgaaa-3′


(SEQ ID NO: 554)





Extender


H43.XAExt 


5′ATAgTAgAcTgcAgTgTccTcAgcccTTAAgcTgTTcATcTgcAAgTA


gAgAgTATTcTTAgAgTTgTcTcTAgATcAcTAcAcc-3′


(SEQ ID NO: 555)
















TABLE 34 





PCR primers
















Primers



H43.XAPCR2
gactgggTgTAgTgATcTAg (SEQ ID NO: 556)


Hucmnest 
cttttctttgttgccgttggggtg (SEQ ID NO:



557)
















TABLE 35





PCR program for amplification of


heavy chain CDR3 DNA


















95 degrees C. 5 minutes




95 degrees C. 20 seconds




60 degrees C. 30 seconds
repeat 20x



72 degrees C. 1 minute




72 degrees C. 7 minutes




 4 degrees C. hold




Reagents (100 ul reaction):




Template
5 ul ligation mix



10x PCR buffer
1x



Taq
5U



dNTPs
200 uM each



MgCl2
 2 mM



H43 · XAPCR2-biotin
400 nM



Hucmnest
200 nM

















TABLE 36 





Annotated sequence of CJR DY3F7(CJR-A05) 10251 bases















Non-cutters









BolI Tgatca 
BsiWI Cgtacg 
BssSI Cacgag 


BstZ17I GTAtac 
BtrI CACgtg 
EcoRV GATatc 


FseI GGCCGGcc 
HpaI GTTaac 
MluI Acgcgt 


PmeI GTTTaaac 
PmlI CACgtg 
PpuMI RGgwccy


RsrII CGgwocg 
SapI GCTCTTC
SexAI Accwggt 


SgfI GCGATcgc 
SgrAI CRccggyg 
SphI GCATGc 


StuI AGGcct 
XmaI Cccggg 













cutters









Enzymes that cut from 1 to 4 times and other features












End of genes II and X

829





Start gene V

843





BsrGI Tgtaca 
1
1021





BspMI Nnnnnnnnngcaggt 
3
1104
5997
9183



(SEQ ID NO: 558)







-″- ACCTGCNNNNn
1
2281





(SEQ ID NO: 559)







End of gene V

1106





Start gene VII

1108





BsaBI GAINNnnatc 
2
1149
3967




(SEQ ID NO: 560)







Start gene IX

1208





End gene VII

1211





SnaBI TACgta 
2
1268
7133




BspHI Tcatga 
3
1299
6085
7093



Start gene VIII

1301





End gene IX

1304





End gene VIII

1522





Start gene III

1578





EagI Cggccg 
2
1630
8905




XbaI Tctaga 
2
1643
8436




KasI Ggcgcc 
4
1650
8724
9039
9120


BsmI GAATGCN
2
1769
9065




BseRI GAGGAGNNNNNNNNNN
2
2031
8516




(SEQ ID NO: 561)







-″- NNnnnnnnnnctoctc 
2
7603
8623




(SEQ ID NO: 562)







AlwNI CAGNNNctg 
3
2210
8072
8182



BspDI ATcgat 
2
2520
9883




NdeI CAtatg 
3
2716
3796
9847



End gene III

2846





Start gene VI

2848





AfeI AGCgct 
1
3032





End gene VI

3187





Start gene I

3189





Earl CTCTICNnnn
2
4067
9274




(SEQ ID NO: 563)







-″- Nnnnngaagag 
2
6126
8953




(SEQ ID NO: 564)







PacI TTAATtaa 
1
4125





Start gene IV

4213





End gene I

4235





BsmFI Nnnnnnnnnnnnnnngtccc 
2
5068
9515




(SEQ ID NO: 565)







MscI TGGcca 
3
5073
7597
9160



PsiI TTAtaa 
2
5349
5837




End gene IV

5493





Start on

5494





NgoMIV Gccggc 
3
5606
8213
9315



BanII GRGCYc 
4
5636
8080
8606
8889


DraIII CACNNNgtg 
1
5709





DrdI GT,CNNNNnngto 
1
5752





(SEQ ID NO: 566)







AvaI Cvcgrg 
2
5818
7240




PvuII CAGctg 
1
5953





BsmBI CGTCTCNnnnn
3
5964
8585
9271



(SEQ ID NO: 567)







End on region

5993





BamHI Ggatcc 
1
5994





HindIII Aagctt 
3
6000
7147
7384



BciVI GTATCCNNNNNN
1
6077





(SEQ ID NO: 568)







Start bla 6138







Eco57I CTGAAG
2
6238
7716




SpeI Actagt 
1
6257





BcgI gcannnnnntcg 
1
6398





(SEQ ID NO: 569)







ScaI AGTact 
1
6442





PvuI CGATcg 
1
6553





FspI TGCgca 
1
6700





BglI GCCNNNNnggc 
3
6801
8208
8976



(SEQ ID NO: 570)







BsaI GGTCTCNnnnn
1
6853





(SEQ ID NO: 571)







AhdI GACNNNnngtc 
1
6920





(SEQ ID NO: 572)







Eam1105I GACNNNnngtc 
1
6920





(SEQ ID NO: 573)







End bla 6998







AccI GTmkac 
2
7153
8048




HincII GTYrac 
1
7153





SalI Gtcgac 
1
7153





XhoI Ctcgag 
1
7240





Start PlacZ region

7246





End PlacZ region

7381





PflMI CCANNNNntgg 
1
7382





(SEQ ID NO: 574)







RBS1

7405





start M13-iii signal seq for LC

7418





ApaLI Gtgcac 
1
7470





end M13-iii signal seq

7471





Start light chain kappa L20:JK1

7472





PflFI GACNnngtc 
3
7489
8705
9099



SbfI CCTGCAgg 
1
7542





PstI CTGCAg 
1
7543





KonI GGTACc 
1
7581





XcmI CCANNNNNnnnntgg 
2
7585
9215




(SEQ ID NO: 575)







Nsii ATGCAt 
2
7626
9503




BsgI ctgcac 
1
7809





BiosI gtcttc 
2
7820
8616




BlpI GCtnaac 
1
2017





EspI GCtnagc 
1
8017





Eco0109I RGgnccy
2
8073
8605




Ecl136I GAGctc 
1
8080





SacI GAGCTc 
1
8080





End light chain

8122





AscI GGcgcacc 
1
8126





BssHII Gcgcgc 
1
8127





RBS2

8147





SfiI GGCCNNNNnggcc 
1
8207





(SEQ ID NO: 576)







NcoI Ccataa 
1
8218





Start 3-23, FR1

8226





MfeI Caattg 
1
8232





BspEI Tccgga 
1
8298





Start CDR1

8316





Statt FR2

8331





BstXI CCANNNNNntgg 
2
8339
8812




(SEQ ID NO: 577)







EcoNI CCTNNnnnagg 
1
8346
8675




(SEQ ID NO: 578)







Start FR3

8373





XbaI Tctaga 
2
8436
1643




AflII Cttaag 
1
8480





Start CDR3

8520





AatII GACGTc 
1
8556





Start FR4

8562





PsnAI GACNNnngtc 
2
8573
9231




(SEQ ID NO: 579)







BstEII Ggtnacc 
1
8579





Start CH1

8595





ApaI GGGCCc 
1
8606





Bsp120I Gaaccc 
1
8606





PspOMI Gggccc 
1
8606





AgeI Accggt 
1
8699





Bs36I CCtnagg 
1
8770
9509




End of CH1

8903





NotI GCggccgc 
1
8904





Start His6 tag 

8913





(SEQ ID NO: 12)







Start cMyc tag 

8931





Amber codon

8982





NheI Gctagc 
1
8985





Start M13 III Domain 
3
8997





NruI TCGcga 
1
9106





BstBI TTcgaa 
1
9197





EcoRI Gaattc 
1
9200





XcmI CCANNNNNnnnntgg 
1
9215





(SEQ ID NO: 580)







BstAPI GCANNNNntgc 
1
9337





(SEQ ID NO: 581)







SacII CCGCgg 
1
9365





End IIIstump anchor

9455





AvrII Cctagg 
1
9462





trp terminator

9470





SwaI ATTTaaat 
1
9784





Start gene II

9850





BglII Agatct 
1
9936













 ----------------------------------------------------------------------


 (SEQ ID NO: 582)


    1 aat gct act act att agt aga att gat gcc acc ttt tca gct cgc gcc 


    gene ii continued


   49 cca aat gaa act ata gct aaa cag gtt att gac cat ttg cga aat gta 


   97 tct aat ggt caa act aaa tct act cgt tcg cag aat tgg gaa tca act 


  145 gtt aTa tgg aat gaa act tcc aaa cac cgt act tta gtt gca tat tta 


  193 aaa cat gtt gag cta cag cat TaT att cag caa tta agc tct aag cca 


  241 tcc gca aaa atg acc tct tat caa aag gag caa tta aag gta ctc tct 


  289 aat cct gac ctg ttg gaa ttt gct tcc ggt ctg gtt cgc ttt aaa gct 


  337 cga att aaa acg cga tat ttg aag tct ttc ggg ctt cct ctt aat ctt 


  385 ttt gat gca atc cgc ttt gct tct gac tat aat agt cag ggt aaa gac 


  433 ctg att ttt gat tta tgg tca ttc tcg ttt tct gaa ctg ttt aaa gca 


  481 ttt gag ggg gat tca ATG aat att tat gac gat tcc gca gta ttg gac 


                          Start gene x, ii continues


  529 gct atc cag tct aaa cat ttt act att acc ccc tct ggc aaa act tct 


  577 ttt gca aaa gcc tct cgc tat ttt ggt ttt tat cgt cgt ctg gta aac 


  625 gag ggt tat gat agt gtt gct ctt act atg cct cgt aat tcc ttt tgg 


  673 cgt tat gta tct gca tta gtt gaa tgt ggt att cct aaa tct caa ctg 


  721 atg aat ctt tct acc tgt aat aat gtt gtt ccg tta gtt cgt ttt att 


  769 aac gta gat ttt tct tcc caa cgt cct gac tgg tat aat gag cca gtt 


  817 ctt aaa atc gca TAA


                      End X & II


  832 ggtaattca ca


  (SEQ ID NO: 626)


       M1              E5                 Q10                 T15


  843 ATG att aaa gtt gaa att aaa cca tct caa gcc caa ttt act act cgt 


      Start gene V


      S17         S20                 P25                 E30


  891 tct ggt gtt tct cgt cag ggc aag cct tat tca ctg aat gag cag ctt 


              V35                 E40                 V45


  939 tgt tac gtt gat ttg ggt act gaa tat ccg gtt ctt gtc aag att act 


          D50                 A55                 L60


  987 ctt gat gaa ggt cag cca gcc tat gcg cct ggt cTG TAC Acc gtt cat


                                                   BsrGI... 


      L65                 V70                 S75                 R80


 1035 ctg tcc tct ttc aaa gtt ggt cag ttc ggt tcc ctt atg att gac cgt 


                      P85     K87 end of V


 1083 ctg cgc ctc gtt ccg gct aag TAA C


 1108 ATG gag cag gtc gcg gat ttc gac aca att tat cag gcg atg 


      Start gene VII


 1150 ata caa atc tcc gtt gta ctt tgt ttc gcg ctt ggt ata atc 


                        VII and IX overlap.


                        ..... S2  V3  L4  V5  (SEQ ID NO: 621)    S10


 1192 gct ggg ggt caa agA TGA gt gtt tta gtg tat tct ttT gcc tct ttc gtt 


                          End VII


                        |start IX


      L13     W15                 G20                 T25             E29


 1242 tta ggt tgg tgc ctt cgt agt ggc att acg tat ttt acc cgt tta atg gaa 


 1293 act tcc tc 


       .... stop of IX, IX and VIII overlap by four bases


 1301 ATG aaa aag tct tta gtc ctc aaa gcc tct gta gcc gtt gct acc ctc 


      Start signal sequence of viii.


 1349 gtt ccg atg ctg tct ttc gct gct gag ggt gac gat ccc gca aaa gcg 


                                  mature VIII --->


 1397 gcc ttt aac tcc ctg caa gcc tca gcg acc gaa tat atc ggt tat gcg 


 1445 tgg gcg atg gtt gtt gtc att 


 1466 gtc ggc gca act atc aat atc aag ctg ttt aag 


 bases 1499-1539 are probable promoter for iii


 1499 aaa ttc acc tcg aaa gca ! 1515


       ...........  −35  ..


 1517      agc tga taaaccgat acaattaaag gctccttttg 


                 ..... −10   ...


 1552 gagccttttt ttt GGAGAt ttt ! S.D. uppercase, there may be 9 Ts





           <------ III signal sequence ----------------------------->


 (SEQ ID NO: 583)


            M   K   K   L   L   F   A   I   P   L   V   V   P   F


 1574 caac GTG aaa aaa tta tta ttc aca att cct tta att gtt cct ttc ! 1620


       Y   S   G   A   A   E   S   H   L   D   G   A


 1620 tat tct ggc gCG GCC Gaa tca caT CTA GAc ggc gcc 


                   EagI....         XbaI....


 Domain 1 ------------------------------------------------------------


           A   E   T   V   E   S   C   L   A


 1656     gct gaa act gct gaa agt tgt tta gca 


       K   S   H   T   E   I   S   F   T   N   V   W   K   D   D   K   T


 1683 aaA Tcc cat aca gaa aat tca ttt aCT AAC GTC TGG AAA GAC GAC AAA ACt 


       L   D   R   Y   A   N   Y   E   G   S   L   W   N   A   T   G   V


 1734 tta aat cgt tac gct aac tat gag ggC tat ctg tgG AAT GCt aca ggc gtt 


                                                    BsmI....


       V   V   C   T   G   D   E   T   Q   C   Y   G   T   W   V   P   I


 1785 gta gtt tgt act ggt GAC GAA ACT CAG TGT TAC GGT ACA TGG GTT cct att 


       G   L   A   I   P   E   N


 1836 ggg ctt gct atc cct gaa aat 


 L1 linker ------------------------------------


       E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S


 1857 gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct 


       E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   T


 1887 gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc ggt act 


  Domain 2 ------------------------------------


 1917 aaa cct cct gag tac aat gat aca cct att ccg ggc tat act tat atc aac 


 1968 cct ctc gac ggc act tat ccg cct ggt act gag caa aac ccc gct act cct 


 2019 aat cct tct ctt GAG GAG tct cag cct ctt aat act ttc atg ttt cag aat 


                      BseRI..


 2070 aat agg ttc cga aat agg cag ggg gca tta act gtt tat acg ggc act 


 2118 gtt act caa ggc act gac ccc gtt aaa act tat tac cag tac act cct 


 2166 gta tca tca aaa gcc atg tat gac gct tac tgg aac ggt aaa ttC AGA


                                                                AlwNI


 2214 GAC TGc gct ttc cat tct ggc ttt aat gaG gat TTa ttT gtt tgt gaa 


       AlwNI


 2262 tat caa ggc caa tcg tct gac ctg cct caa cct cct gtc aat gct 


 2307 ggc ggc ggc tct 


 start L2


 2319 ggt ggt ggt tct 


 2331 ggt ggc ggc tct 


 2343 gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag gga ggc ggt tcc 


 2373 ggt ggt ggc tct ggt end L2





 Many published sequences of M13-derived phage have a longer linker


 than shown here by repeats of the EGGGS motif two more times.


 Domain 3


 (SEQ ID NO: 584)


 -------------------------------------------------------------


       S   G   D   F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N   K   G   A


 2388 tcc ggt gat ttt gat tat gaa aag atg gca aac gct aat aag ggg gct 


       M   T   E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S   D   A   K   G


 2436 atg acc gaa aat gcc gat gaa aat gcg cta cag tct gac gct aaa ggc 


       K   L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A   A   M   D   G   F


 2484 aaa ctt gat tct gtc gct act gat tac ggt gct gct atc gat ggt ttc 


       I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G   N   G   A   T   G   D


 2532 att ggt gac gtt tcc ggc ctt gct aat ggt aat ggt gct act ggt gat 


       F   A   G   S   N   S   Q   M   A   Q   V   G   D   G   D   N


 2580 ttt gct ggc tct aat tcc caa atg gct caa gtc ggt gac ggt gat aat 


       S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R   O   Y   L   P   S   L   P   Q


 2628 tca cct tta atg aat aat ttc cgt caa tat tta cct tcc ctt tct caa 


       S   V   E   C   R   P   F   V   F   G   A   G   K   P   Y   E


 2676 tcg gtt gaa tat cgc cct ttt gtc ttt Ggc gct ggt aaa cca tat gaa 


       F   S   I   D   C   D   K   I   N   L   F   R


 2724 ttt tct att gat tgt gac aaa ata aaa tta ttc cgt 


                                                  End Domain 3


       G   V   F   A   F   L   L   Y   V   A   T   F   M   Y   V  F140


 2760 ggt gtc ttt gcg ttt ctt tta tat gtt gcc acc ttt atg tat gta ttt 


      start transmembrane segment 


       S   T   F   A   N   I   L


 2808 tct acg ttt gct aac ata ctg 


       R   N   K   E   S


 2829 cgt aat aag gag tct TAA ! stop of iii


     Intracellular anchor.


     (SEQ ID NO: 585)


          M1  P2  V   L   L5  G   I   P   L  L10  L   R   F   L  G15


 2847 tc ATG cca gtt ctt ttg ggt att ccg tta tta ttg cgt ttc ctc ggt 


         Start VI


 2894 ttc ctt ctg gta act ttg ttc ggc tat ctg ctt act ttt ctt aaa aag 


 2942 ggc ttc ggt aaa ata gct att gct att tca ttg ttt ctt gct ctt att 


 2990 att ggg ctt aac tca att ctt gtg ggt tat ctc tct gat att agc gct 


 3038 caa tta ccc tct gac ttt gtt cag ggt gtt cag tta att ctc ccg tct 


 3086 aat acg ctt ccc tgt ttt tat gtt att ctc tct gta aag gct act att 


 3134 att ttt gat ttt gtt aaa caa aaa atc gtt tct tat ttg gat tgg gat 


                 M1  A2  V3      F5                 L10         G13


 3182 aaa TAA t ATG gct gtt tat ttt gta act ggc aaa tta ggc tct gga 


       end VI   Start gene I





 (SEQ ID NO: 586)


       K   T   L   V   S   V   G   K   I   Q   D   K   I   V   A


 3228 aag acg ctc gtt agc gtt ggt aag att cag gat aaa att gta gct 


       G   C   K   I   A   T   N   L   D   L   R   L   Q   N   L


 3273 ggg tgc aaa ata gca act aat ctt gat tta agg ctt caa aac ctc 


       P   Q   V   G   R   F   A   K   T   P   R   V   L   R   I


 3318 ccg caa gtc ggg agg ttc gct aaa acg cct cgc gtt ctt aga ata 


       P   D   K   P   S   I   S   D   L   L   A   I   G   R   G


 3363 ccg gat aag cct tct ata tct gat ttg ctt gct att ggg cgc ggt 


       N   D   S   Y   D   E   N   K   N   G   L   L   V   L   D


 3408 aat gat tcc tac gat gaa aat aaa aac ggc ttg ctt gtt ctc gat 


       E   C   G   T   W   F   N   T   R   S   W   N   D   K   F


 3453 gag tgc ggt act tgg ttt aat ccc cgt tct tgg aat gat aag gaa 


       R   O   P   I   I   D   W   F   L   H   A   R   K   L   G


 3498 aga cag ccg att att gat tgg ttt cta cat gct cgt aaa tta gga 


       W   D   I   I   F   L   V   Q   D   L   S   I   V   D   K


 3543 tgg gat att att ttt ctt gtt cag gac tta tct att gtt gat aaa 


       Q   A   R   S   A   L   A   E   H   V   V   Y   C   R   R


 3588 cag gcg cgt tct gca tta gct aaa cat gtt gtt tat tgt cgt cgt 


       L   D   R   I   T   L   P   F   V   G   T   L   Y   S   L


 3633 ctg aac aga att act tta cct ttt gtc aat act tta tat tct ctt 


       I   T   G   S   K   M   P   L   P   K   L   H   V   G   V


 3678 att act ggc tcg aaa atg cct ctg cct aaa tta cat gtt ggc gtt 


       V   K   Y   G   D   S   Q   L   S   P   T   V   E   R   W


 3723 gtt aaa tat ggc gat tct caa tta agc cct act gtt gag cat tgg 


       L   Y   T   G   K   N   L   Y   N   A   Y   D   T   K   Q


 3768 ctt tat act ggt aag aat ttg tat aac gca tat gat act aaa cag 


       A   F   S   S   N   Y   D   S   G   V   Y   S   Y   L   T


 3813 gct ttt tct agt aat tat gat tcc ggt gtt tat tct tat tta acg 


       P   Y   L   S   H   G   R   Y   F   K   P   L   N   L   G


 3858 cct tat tta tca cac ggt cgg tat ttc aaa cca tta aat tta ggt 


       Q   K   M   K   L   T   K   I   V   L   K   K   F   S   R


 3903 cag aag atg aaa tta act aaa ata tat ttg aaa aag ttt tct cgc 


       V   L   C   L   A   I   G   F   A   S   A   F   T   Y   S


 3948 gtt ctt tgt ctt gcg att gga ttt gca tca gca ttt aca tat agt 


       Y   I   T   Q   P   K   P   E   V   K   K   V   V   S   Q


 3993 tat ata acc caa cct aag ccg gag gtt aaa aag gta gtc tct cag 


       T   Y   D   F   D   K   F   T   I   D   S   S   Q   R   L


 4038 acc tat gat ttt gat aaa ttc act att gac tct tct cag cgt ctt 


       N   L   S   Y   R   Y   V   F   K   D   S   K   G   K   L


 4083 aat cta agc tat cgc tat gtt ttc aag gat tct aag gga aaa TTA


                                                              PacI


       I   N   S   D   D   L   Q   K   Q   G   Y   S   L   T   Y


 4128 ATT AAt agc gac gat tta cag aag caa ggt tat tca ctc aca tat 


     PadI


      i  I   D   L   C   T   V   S   I   K   K   G   N   S   N   E


     iv                                                       Ml  K


 4173   att gat tta tgt act gtt tcc att aaa aaa ggt aat tca aAT Gaa 


                                                             Start IV


 (SEQ ID NO: 527)


     i    I   V   K   C   N   .End of I


     iv    L3  L   N5  V   I7  N    F  V10


 4218    att gtt aaa tgt aat TAA T TTT GTT


  IV continued.....


 4243 ttc ttg atg ttt gtt tca tca tct tct ttt gct cag gta att gaa atg 


 4291 aat aat tcg cct ctg cac gat ttt gta act tgg tat tca aag caa tca 


 4339 ggc gaa tcc gtt att gtt tct ccc gat gta aaa ggt act gtt act gta 


 4387 tat tca tct gac gtt aaa cct gaa aat cta cgc aat ttc ttt att tct 


 4435 gtt tta cgt gcA aat aat ttt gat atg gtA ggt tcT aAC cct tcc atT


 4483 att cag aag tat aat cca aac aat cag gat tat att gat gaa ttg cca 


 4531 tca tct gat aat cag gaa tat gat gat aat tcc gct cct tct ggt ggt 


 4579 ttc ttt gtt ccg caa aat gat aat gtt act caa act ttt aaa att aat 


 4627 aac gtt cgg gca aag gat tta ata cga gtt gtc gaa ttg ttt gta aag 


 4675 tct aat act tct aaa tcc tca aat gta tta tct att gac ggc tct aat 


 4723 cta tta gtt gtt agt gcT cct aaa gat att tta gat aac ctt cct caa 


 4771 ttc ctt tcA act gtt gat ttg cca act gac cag ata ttg att gag ggt


 4819 ttg ata ttt gag gtt caa caa ggt gat gct tta gat ttt tca ttt gct 


 4867 gct ggc tct cag cgt ggc act gtt gca ggc ggt gtt aat act gac cgc 


 4915 ctc acc tct gtt tta tct tct gct ggt ggt tcg ttc ggt att ttt aat 


 4963 ggc gat gtt tta ggg cta tca gtt cgc gca tta aaa act aat agc cat 


 5011 tca aaa ata ttg tct gtg cca cgt att ctt acg ctt tca ggt cag aag 


 5059 ggt tct atc tct gtT GGC CAg aat gtc cct ttt att act ggt cgt gtg 


                        MscI....


 5107 act ggt gaa tct gcc aat gta aat aat cca ttt cag acg att gag cgt 


 5155 caa aat gta ggt att tcc atg agc gtt ttt cct gtt gca atg gct ggc 


 5203 ggt aat att gtt ctg gat att acc agc aag gcc gat agt ttg agt tct 


 5251 tct act cag gca agt gat gtt att act aat caa aga agt att gct aca 


 5299 acg gtt aat ttg cgt gat gga cag act ctt tta ctc ggt ggc ctc act 


 5347 gat tat aaa aac act tct caG gat tct ggc gta ccg ttc cta tct aaa 


 5395 atc cct tta atc ggc ctc ctg ttt agc tcc cgc tct gat tcT aac gag 


 5443 gaa agc acg tta tac gtg ctc gtc aaa gca acc ata gta cgc gcc ctg 


 5491 TAG cggcgcatt 


      End IV


 5503 aagcgcggcg ggtgtggtgg ttacgcgcag cgtgaccgct acacttgcca gcgccctagc 


 5563 gcccgctcct ttcgctttct tcccttcctt tctcgccacg ttcGCCGGCt ttccccgtca 


                                                     NgoMI.


 5623 agctctaaat cgggggctcc ctttagggtt ccgatttagt gctttacggc acctcgaccc 


 5683 caaaaaactt gatttgggtg atggttCACG TAGTGggcca tcgccctgat agacggtttt 


                                  DraIII....


 5743 tcgccctttG ACGTTGGAGT Ccacgttctt taataatgga ctcttgttcc aaactggaac


               DrdI..........


 5803 aacactcaac cctatctcgg gctattcttt tgatttataa gggattttgc cgatttcgga 


 5863 accaccatca aacaggattt tcgcctgcta gggcaaacca gcatggaccg cttgctgcaa 


 5923 ctctctcagg gccaggcggt gaagggcaat CAGCTGttgc cCGTCTCact ggtgaaaaga 


                                       PvuII.      BsmBI.


 5983 aaaaccaccc tGGATCC AAGCTT


                  BamHI HindIII (1/2)


                  Insert carrying bla gene


 6006    gcaggtg gcacttttcg gggaaatgtg cgcggaaccc 


 6043 ctatttgttt atttttctaa atacattcaa atatGTATCC gctcatgaga caataaccct 


                                           BciVI


 6103 gataaatgct tcaataatat tgaaaaAGGA AGAgt 


                                  RBS.?...


      Start bla gene


 6138 ATG agt att caa cat ttc cgt gtc gcc ctt att ccc ttt ttt gcg gcg ttt 


 6189 tgc ctt cct att ttt gct cac cca gaa acg ctg gta aaa gta aaa gat gct 


 6240 gaa gat cag ttg ggC gcA CTA GTg ggt tac atc gaa ctg gat ctc aac agc


                            SpeI....


                       ApaLI & BssSI Removed


 6291 ggt aag atc ctt gag agt ttt cgc ccc gaa gaa cgt ttt cca atg atg agc 


 6342 act ttt aaa gtt ctg cta tgt GGC GcG Gta tta tcc cgt att gac gcc ggg 


 6393 caa gaG CAA CTC GGT CGc cgC ATA cAC tat tct cag aat gac ttg gtt gAG


            BcgI............                                           ScaI


 6444 TAC Tca cca gtc aca gaa aag cat ctt ccg gat ggc atg aca gta aga gaa 


      ScaI.


 6495 tta tgc agt gct gcc ata acc atg agt gat acc act gcg gcc acc tta ctt 


 6546 ctg aca aCG ATC Gga gga ccg aag gag cta ace gct ttt ttg cac aac atg 


               PvuI....


 6597 ggg gat cat gta act cgc ctt gat cgt tgg gaa ccg gag ctg cat gaa gcc


 6648 ata cca aac gac gag cgt gac acc acg atg cct gta gca atg Gca aca acg 


 6699 tTG CGC Ace cta tta act ggc gaa cta ctt act cta gct tcc cgg caa caa


       FspI....


 6750 tta ata gac tgg atg gag gcg gat aaa gtt gca gga cca ctt ctg cgc tcg 


 6801 GCC ctt ccG GCt ggc tgg ttt att gct gat aaa tct gga gcc ggt gag cgt 


      BglI..........


 6852 gGG TCT Cgc ggt atc att gca gca ctg ggg cca gat ggt aag ccc tcc cgt 


       BsaI....


 6903 atc gta gtt atc tac acG ACg ggg aGT Cag gca act atg gat gaa cga aat 


                            AhdI...........


 6954 aga cag atc gct gag ata ggt gcc tca ctg att aag cat tgg TAA ctgt 


                                                              stop


 7003 cagaccaagt ttactcatat atactttaga ttgatttaaa acttcatttt taatttaaaa 


 7063 ggatctaggt gaagatcctt tttgataatc tcatgaccaa aatcccttaa cgtgagtttt 


 7123 cgttccactg tacgtaagac cccc 


 7147 AAGCTT   GTCGAC tgaa tggcgaatgg cgctttgcct 


      HindIII  SalI..


      (2/2)    HincII


 7183 ggtttccggc accagaagcg gtgccggaaa gctggctgga gtgcgatctt 





 Start of Fab-display cassette, the Feb DSR-A05, selected for


 binding to a protein antigen.


 7233 CCTGAcG CTCGAG


      xBsu36I XhoI..


 PlacZ promoter is in the following block


 7246                         cgcaacgc aattaatgtg agttagctca 


 7274 ctcattaggc accccaggct ttacacttta tgcttccggc tcgtatgttg 


 7324 tgtggaattg tgagcggata acaatttcac acaggaaaca gctatgacca 


 7374 tgattacgCC AagcttTGGa gccttttttt tggagatttt caac 


              PflMI.......


                 Hind3. (there are 3)


 Gene iii signal sequence: (Amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 587)


          1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15


          M   K   K   L   L   F   A   I   P   L   V   V   P   F   Y


 7418    gtg aaa aaa tta tta ttc gca att cct tta gtt gtt cct ttc tat 


      16  17  18          Start light chain (L20:JK1)


       S   H   S   A   Q   D   I   Q   M   T   Q   S   P   A


 7463 tct cac aGT GCA Caa gac atc cag atg arc cag tct cca gcc 


               ApaLI...


               Sequence supplied by extender............


            T   L   S   L


 7505      acc ctg tct tta 


       S   P   G   E   R   A   T   L   S   C   R   A   S   Q   G


 7517 tct cca ggg gaa aga gcc acc ctc tcc tgc agg acc agt cag Ggt 


       V   S   S   Y   L   A   W   Y   Q   Q   K   P   G   Q   A


 7562 gtt agc agc tat tta gcc tgg tac cag cag aaa cct ggc cag gct 


       P   R   L   L   I   Y   D   A   S   S   R   A   T   G   I


 7607 ccc agg ctc ctc atc tat gAt aca tcc aAc agg acc act ggc atc 


       P   A   R   F   S   G   S   G   P   G   T   D   F   T   L


 7652 cca gCc agg ttc agt ggc agt ggg Cct ggg aca gac ttc act ctc 


       T   I   S   S   L   E   P   E   D   F   A   V   Y   Y   C


 7697 acc atc agc agC ctA gag cct gaa gat ttt gca gtT tat tac tgt 


       Q   Q   R   S   W   H   P   W   T   F   G   Q   G   T   R


 7742 cag cag CGt aAc tgg cat ccg tgg ACG TTC GGC CAA GGG ACC AAG


       V   E   I   K   R   T   V   A   A   P   S   V   F   I   F


 7787 gtg gaa atc aaa cga act gtg gCT GCA Cca tct gtc ctc atc ttc 


                                   BsgI....


       P   P   S   D   E   Q   L   K   S   G   T   A   S   V   V


 7832 ccg cca tct gat gag cag ttg aaa tct gga act gcc tct gtt gtg 


       C   L   L   N   N   F   Y   P   R   E   A   K   V   Q   W


 7877 tcg ctg ctg aat aac ttc tat ccc aga gag gcc aaa gta cag tgg 


       K   V   D   N   A   L   Q   S   G   N   S   Q   E   S   V


 7922 aag gtg gat aac gcc ctc caa tcg ggt aac tcc cag gag agt gtc


       T   E   R   D   S   K   D   S   T   Y   S   L   S   S   T


 7967 aca gag cgg gac agc aag gac agc acc tac agc ctc agc agc acc 


       L   T   L   S   K   A   D   Y   E   K   H   K   V   Y   A


 8012 ctg acG CTG AGC aaa gca gac tac gag aaa cac aaa gtc tac gcc 


            EspI.....


       C   E   V   T   H   Q   G   L   S   S   P   V   T   K   S


 8057 tgc gaa gtc acc cat cag ggc ctG AGC TCg ccc gtc aca aag agc 


                                    SacI....


       F   N   R   G   E   C   .   .


 8102 ttc aac agg gga gag tgt taa taa 


 8126     GGCGCG CCaattctat ttcaaGGAGA cagtcata 


          AscI.....              RBS2.


        (Amino acid sequence is SEQ ID NO: 588)


       PelB signal sequence------(22 codons)----->


        1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15


       M   K   Y   L   L   P   T   A   A   A   G   L   L   L   L


 8160 atg aaa tac cta ttg cct acg gca gcc gct gga ttg tta tta ctc 


      ...PelB signal------------> Start VH, FR1----------------->


       16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30


       A   A   Q   P   A   M   A   E   V   Q   L   L   E   S   G


 8205 acG GCC cag ccG GCC atg gcc gaa gtt CAA TTG tta gaa tct ggt 


        SfiI.............                 MfeI...


                       NcoI....


       31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45


       G   G   L   V   Q   P   G   G   S   L   R   L   S   C   A


 8250 aac ggt ctt gtt caa cct ggt ggt tct tta cgt ctt tct tgc gct 


      ...FR1----------------> CDR1------------------> FR2-------->


       46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60


       A   S   G   F   T   F   S   T   Y   E   M   R   W   V   R


 8295 gct TCC GGA ttc act ttc tct act tac gag atg cgt tgg gtt cgC


          BspEI..                                               BstXI...


       FR2--------------------------------------> CDR2 ---------->


       61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75


       Q   A   P   G   K   G   L   E   N   V   S   Y   I   A   P


 8340 CAa gct ccT GGt aaa ggt ttg gag tgg gtt tct tat atc gct cct 


  BstXI.............


       ...CDR2------------------------------------------> FR3---->


       76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90


       S   G   G   D   T   A   Y   A   D   S   V   K   G   R   F


 8385 tct ggt ggc gat act gct tat gct gac tcc gtt aaa ggt cgc ttc 


       91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105


       T   I   S   R   D   N   S   K   N   T   L   Y   L   Q   M


 8430 act atc TCT AGA gac aac tct aag aat act ctc tac ttg cag atg


              XbaI...


              Supplied by extender-------------------------------


      -----------------------------------------FR3-------------->


      106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120


       N   S   L   R   A   E   D   T   A   V   Y   Y   C   A   R


 8475 aac agC TTA AGg gct gag gac act gca gtc tac tat tgt gcg agg 


            AflII...


      from extender--------------------------------->


      CDR3--------------------------------------------------> FR4-->


      121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135


       R   L   D   G   Y   I   S   Y   Y   Y   G   M   D   V   W


 8520 agg ctc gat ggc tat att tcc tac tac tac ggt atg GAC GTC tgg 


                                                      AatII..


      136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145


       G   Q   G   T   T   V   T   V   S   S


 8565 aac caa ggg acc acG GTC ACC gtc tca agc 


                        BstEII...


       CH1 of IaG1---------->


       A   S   T   K   G   P   S   V   F   P   L   A   P   S   S


 8595 ggc tcc acc aag ggc cca tcg gtc ttc ccc ctg gca ccc tcc tcc 


       K   S   T   S   G   G   T   A   A   L   G   C   L   V   K


 8640 aag agc acc tct ggg ggc aca gcg gcc ctg ggc tgc ctg gtc aag


       D   Y   F   P   E   P   V   T   V   S   W   N   S   G   A


 8685 gac tac ttc ccc gaa ccg gtg acg gtg tcg tgg aac tca ggc gcc


       L   T   S   G   V   H   T   F   P   A   V   L   Q   S   S


 8730 ctg acc agc ggc gtc cac acc ttc ccg gct gtc cta cap tCC TCA


                                                           Bsu36I....


       G   L   Y   S   L   S   S   V   V   T   V   P   S   S   S


 8775 GGa ctc tac tcc ctc agc agc gta gta acc gtg ccc tcc agc agc 


  Bsu36I....


       L   G   T   Q   T   Y   I   C   N   V   N   H   K   P   S


 8820 ttg ggc acc cap acc tac atc tgc aac gtg aat cac aag ccc agc


       N   T   K   V   D   K   K   V   E   P   K   S   C   A   A


 8865 aac acc aag gtg gac aag aaa gtt gag ccc aaa tct tgt GCG GCC


                                                          NotI......


       A   H   H   H   H   H   H   G   A   A   E   Q   K   L   I


 8910 GCa cat cat cat cac cat cac ggg gcc gaa gaa caa aaa ctc atc


  ..NotI....  H6 tag............. Myc-Tag........................ 


       S   E   E   D   L   N   G   A   A   p   A   S   S   A


 8955 tca gaa gag gat ctg aat ggg ggg gca tag GCT AGC tct gct 


      Myc-Tag....................         ... NheI...


                                         Amber





 III′ stump


 Domain 3 of III -------------------------------------------------------


      S   G   D   F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N   K   G   A


 8997 agt ggc gac ttc gac tac gag aaa atg gct aat gcc aac aaa CCC GCC


      tcc   t   t   t   t   t   a   g       a   c   t   t   g   g   t !W.T.


       M   T   E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S   D   A   K   G


 9045 atG ACT GAG AAC GCT GAC GAG aat gct ttg caa agc gat gcc aag ggt 


            c   a   t   c   t   a   c   g c a   g tct   c   t   a   c !W.T.


       K   L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A   A   I   D   G   F


 9093 aag tta gac agc gTC GCG Acc gac tat GGC GCC gcc ATC GAc ggc ttt 


        a c t   t tct       t   t   t   c   t   t   t       t   t   c !W.T.


                       NruI....           KasI...(3/4)


       I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G   N   G   A   T   G   D


 9141 atc ggc gat gtc agt ggt tTG GCC Aac ggc aac gga gcc acc gga gac 


        t   t   c   t tcc   c c t   t   t   t   t   t   t   t   t   t !W.T.


                               MscI....(3/3)


       F   A   G   S   N   S   Q   M   A   Q   V   G   D   G   D   N


 9189 ttc GCA GGT tcG AAT TCt cag ata gcC CAG GTT GGA GAT GGg gac aac 


        t   t   c   t       c   a       t   a   c   t   c   t   t   t !W.T.


          BspMI.. (2/2)                 XcmI................


                    EcoRi...


       S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R   Q   Y   L   P   S   L   P   Q


 9237 agt ccg ctt atg aac aac ttt aga cag tac ctt ccg tct ctt ccg cap


      tca   t t a       t   t   c c t   a   t t a   t   c   c   t   a !W.T.


       S   V   E   C   R   P   F   V   F   S   A   G   K   P   Y   E   


9285 agt gtc gag tgc cgt cca ttc gtt ttc tct gcc ggc aag cct tat gag 


       tcg   t   a   t   c   t   t   c   t agc   t   t   a   a   t   a !W.T.


       F   S   I   D   C   D   K   I   N   L   F   R


 9333 ttc aGC Atc gac TGC gat aag atc aat ctt ttC CGC


        t tct   t   t   t   c   a   a   c t a   c   t !W.T.


           BstAPI........                       SacII...


                                                 End Domain 3





       G   V   F   A   F   L   L   Y   V   A   T   F   N   Y   V   F


 9369 GGc gtt ttc gct ttc ttg cta tac gtc gct act ttc atg tac gtt ttc 


        t   c   t   g   t c t t a   t   t   c   c   t       t   a   t !W.T.


     start transmembrane segment 


       S   T   F   A   N   I   L     R   N   K   E   S


 9417 aGC ACT TTC GCC AAT ATT TTA   Cgc aac aaa gaa agc 


      tct   g   t   t   c   a c g     t   t   g   g tct !W.T.


                                    Intracellular anchor.


       .   .


 9453 tag tga tct CCT AGG


                  AvrII..


 9468 aag ccc gcc taa tga gcg ggc ttt ttt ttt ct  ggt 


        | Trp terminator                     |


 End Fab cassette


 9503   ATGCAT CCTGAGG  ccgat actgtcgtcg tcccctcaaa ctggcagatg 


        NsiI.. Bsu36I.(3/3)


 9551 cacggttacg atgcgcccat ctacaccaac gtgacctatc ccattacggt caatccgccg 


 9611 tttgttccca cggagaatcc gacgggttgt tactcgctca catttaatgt tgatgaaaac 


 9671 tggctacagg aaggccagac gcgaattatt tttgatggcg ttcctattgg ttaaaaaatg 


 9731 agctgattta acaaaaattt aaTgcgaatt ttaacaaaat attaacgttt acaATTTAAA


                                                                SwaI...


 9791 Tatttgctta tacaatcttc ctgtttttgg ggcttttctg attatcaacc GGGGTAcat 


 9850 ATG att gac atg cta gtt tta cga tta ccg ttc atc gat tct ctt gtt tgc 


      Start gene II


 9901 tcc aga ctc tca ggc aat gac ctg ata gcc ttt gtA GAT CTc tca aaa ata 


                                                    BglII...


 9952 gct acc ctc tcc ggc atT aat tta tca gct aga acg gtt gaa tat cat att 


10003 gat ggt gat ttg act gtc tcc ggc ctt tct cac cct ttt gaa tct tta cct 


10054 aca cat tac tca ggc att gca ttt aaa ata tat gag ggt tct aaa aat ttt 


10105 tat cct tgc gtt gaa ata aag gct tct ccc gca aaa gta tta cag ggt cat 


10156 aat gtt ttt ggt aca acc gat tta gct tta tgc tct gag gct tta ttg ctt 


10207 aat ttt gct aat tct ttg cct tgc ctg tat gat tta ttg gat gtt !


 gene II continues


------------------------ End of Table -------------------------------
















TABLE 37 





DNA seq of w.t. M13 gene iii 















(Nucleotide sequence is SEQ ID NO: 590; Amino acid sequene is SEQ ID NO: 591) 


         1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15 


        fM   K   K   L   L   F   A   I   P   L   V   V   P   F   Y 


  1579  gtg aaa aaa tta tta ttc gca att cct tta gtt gtt cct ttc tat 


        Signal sequence............................................ 


        16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30 


        S   H   S   A   E   T   V   E   S   C   L   A   K   P   H 


  1624 tct cac tcc gct gaa act gtt gaa agt tgt tta gca aaa ccc cat 


Signal sequence>   Domain 1--------------------------------------- 


        31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42  43  44  45 


        T   E   N   S   F   T   N   V   W   K   D   D   K   T   L 


  1669 aca gaa aat tca ttt act aac gtc tgg aaa gac gac aaa act tta 


       Domain 1--------------------------------------------------- 


        46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58  59  60 


        D   R   Y   A   N   Y   E   G   C   L   W   N   A   T   G 


  1714 gat cgt tac gct aac tat gag ggt tgt ctg tgG AAT GCt aca ggc 


                                                  BsmI.... 


       Domain 1--------------------------------------------------- 


        61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73  74  75 


        V   V   V   C   T   G   D   E   T   Q   C   Y   G   T   W 


  1759 gtt gta gtt tgt act ggt gac gaa act cag tgt tac ggt aca tgg 


       Domain 1--------------------------------------------------- 


        76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88  89  90 


        V   P   I   G   L   A   I   P   E   N   E   G   G   G   S 


  1804 gtt cct att ggg ctt gct atc cct gaa aat gag ggt ggt ggc tct 


       Domain 1------------------------------> Linker 1----------- 


        91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99 100 101 102 103 104 105 


        E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   T 


  1849 gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc ggt tct gag ggt ggc ggt act 


       Linker 1-------------------------------------------------->


       106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 


        K   P   P   E   Y   G   D   T   P   I   P   G   Y   T   Y 


  1894 aaa cct cct gag tac ggt gat aca cct att ccg ggc tat act tat 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 


        I   N   P   L   D   G   T   Y   P   P   G   T   E   Q   N 


  1939 atc aac cct ctc gac ggc act taT CCG CCt ggt act gag caa aac 


                                     EciI.... 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 


        P   A   N   P   N   P   S   L   E   E   S   Q   P   L   N 


  1984 ccc gct aat cct aat cct tct ctt GAG GAG tct cag cct ctt aat 


                                       BseRI.. 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 


        T   F   M   F   Q   N   N   R   F   R   N   R   Q   G   A 


  2029 act ttc atg ttt cag aat aat agg ttc cga aat agg cag ggg gca 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 


        L   T   V   Y   T   G   T   V   T   Q   G   T   D   P   V 


  2074 tta act gtt tat acg ggc act gtt act caa ggc act gac ccc gtt 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 


        K   T   Y   Y   Q   Y   T   P   V   S   S   K   A   M   Y 


  2119 aaa act tat tac cag tac act cct gta tca tca aaa gcc atg tat 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 


        D   A   Y   W   N   G   K   F   R   D   C   A   F   H   S 


  2164 gac gct tac tgg aac ggt aaa ttC AGa gaC TGc gct ttc cat tct 


                                     AlwNI....... 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 


        G   F   N   E   D   P   F   V   C   E   Y   Q   G   Q   S 


  2209 ggc ttt aat gaG GAT CCa ttc gtt tgt gaa tat caa ggc caa tcg 


                     BamHI... 


       Domain 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 


        S   D   L   P   Q   P   P   V   N   A   G   G   G   S   G 


  2254 tct gac ctg cct caa cct cct gtc aat gct ggc ggc ggc tct ggt 


       Domain 2------------------------------> Linker 2----------- 


       241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 


        G   G   S   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   F   G   G 


  2299 ggt ggt tct ggt ggc ggc tct gag ggt ggt ggc tct gag ggt ggc 


       Linker 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 


        G   S   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   G   G   G 


  2344 ggt tct gag ggt ggc aac tct gag gga ggc ggt tcc ggt ggt ggc 


       Linker 2--------------------------------------------------- 


       271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 


        S   G   S   G   D   F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N 


  2389 tct ggt tcc ggt gat ttt gat tat gaa aag atg gca aac gct aat 


Linker 2>      Domain 3------------------------------------------- 


       286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 


        K   G   A   M   T   E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S 


  2434 cag ggg gct atg acc gaa aat gcc gat gaa aac gcg cta cag tct 


       Domain 3--------------------------------------------------- 


       301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 


        D   A   K   G   K   L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A 


  2479 gac gct aaa ggc aaa ctt gat tct gtc gct act gat tac ggt gct 


       Domain 3---------------------------------------------------


       316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 


        A   I   D   G   F   I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G 


  2524 gct atc gat ggt ttc att ggt aac gtt tcc ggc ctt gct aat ggt 


       Domain 3--------------------------------------------------- 


       331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 


        N   G   A   T   G   D   F   A   G   S   N   S   Q   M   A 


  2569 aat ggt gct act ggt gat ttt gct ggc tct aat tcc caa atg gct 


       Domain 3--------------------------------------------------- 


       346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 


        Q   V   G   D   G   D   N   S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R 


  2614 caa gtc ggt gac ggt gat aat tca cct tta atg aat aat ttc cgt


       Domain 3---------------------------------------------------


       361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 


        Q   Y   L   P   S   L   P   Q   S   V   E   C   R   P   F 


  2659 caa tat tta cct tcc ctc cct caa tcg gtt gaa tgt cgc cct ttt 


       Domain 3--------------------------------------------------- 


       376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 


        V   E   S   A   N   K   P   Y   E   F   S   I   D   C   D 


  2704 gtc ttt agc gct ggt aaa cca tat gaa ttt tct att gat tgt gac 


       Domain 3---------------------------------------------------


       391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 


        K   I   N   L   F   R   G   V   F   A   F   L   L   Y   V 


  2749 aaa ata sac tta tcc cgt ggt gtc ttt gcg ttt ctt tta tat gtt 


       Domain 3--------------> Transmembrane segment-------------- 


       406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 


        A   T   E   M   Y   V   E   S   T   F   A   N   I   L   K 


  2794 gcc acc ttt atg tat gta ttt tct acg ttt gct aac ata ctg cgt 


       Transmembrane segment---------------------------------> ICA-- 


       421 422 423 424 425 


        N   K   E   S   . 


  2839 aat aag gag tct taa ! 2853 


       ICA----------->            ICA = intracellular anchor 


------------------- End of Table -----------------------------------------
















TABLE 38







           Whole mature III anchor M13-III 


           derived anchor with recoded DNA 


           1   2   3 


           A   A   A (SEQ ID NO: 594) 


    1     GCG gcc gca (SEQ ID NO: 593) 


          NotI...... 


           4   5   6   7   8   9  10  11  12  13  14  15  16  17 


           H   H   H   H   H   H   G   A   A   E   Q   K   L   I 


   10     cat cat cat cac cat cac ggg gcc gca gaa caa aaa ctc atc 


          18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29 


           S   E   E   D   L   N   G   A   A   .   A   S 


   52     tca gaa gag gat ctg aat ggg gcc gca Tag GCT AGC 


                                                  NheI... 


        30  31  32  33  34  35  36    37  38  39 


         D   I   N   D   D   R   M     A   S   T 


   88   GAT ATC aac gat gat cgt atg   gct tct act 


 (ON_G37bot) [RC] 5′-c aac gat gat cgt atg gcG CAt Gct gcc gag aca g-3′


        EcoRV..               (SEQ ID NO: 592) 


        Enterokinase cleavage site. 


  Start mature III (recoded) Domain 1 ---->


             40  41  42  43 


              A   E   T   V 


  118       |gcC|gaG|acA|gtC|


               t   a   t   t ! W.T. 


       44  45  46  47  48  49  50  51  52  53  54  55  56  57  58 


        E   S   C   L   A   K   P   H   T   E   N   S   F   T   N 


  130 |gaa|TCC|tgC|CTG|GCC|AaG|ccT|caC|acT|gaG|aat|AGT|ttC|aCA|Aat|


           agt   t t a   a   a   c   t   a   a     tca   t   t   c ! W.T. 


                    MscI.... 


       59  60  61  62  63  64  65  66  67  68  69  70  71  72  73 


        V   W   K   D   D   K   T   L   D   R   Y   A   N   Y   E 


  175 |gtg|TGG|aaG|gaT|gaT|aaG|acC|CtT|gAT|CGA|TaT|gcC|aaT|taC|gaA|


         c       a   c   c   a   t t a       t   c   t   c   t   g ! W.T. 


                                        BspDI... 


       74  75  76  77  78  79  80  81  82  83  84  85  86  87  88 


        G   C   L   W   N   A   T   G   V   V   V   C   T   G   D 


  220 |ggC|tgC|TtA|tgg|aat|gcC|ACC|GGC|GtC|gtT|gtC|TGC|ACG|ggC|gaT|


         t   t c g           t   a       t   a   t   t   t   t   c ! W.T. 


                             SgrAI......         BsgI.... 


       89  90  91  92  93  94  95  96  97  98  99  100 101 102 103 


        E   T   Q   C   Y   G   T   W   V   P   I   G   L   A   I 


  265 |gaG|acA|caA|tgC|taT|ggC|ACG|TGg|gtG|ccG|atA|gGC|TTA|GCC|atA|


         a   t   g   t   c   t   a       t   t   t   g c t   t   c ! W.T. 


                            PmlI....               BlpI.....


    Domain 1----> Linker 1----------------->


       104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 


        P   E   N   E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   E   G 


  310 |ccG|gaG|aaC|gaA|ggC|ggC|ggT|AGC|gaA|ggC|ggT|ggC|AGC|gaA|gge|


         t   a   t   g   t   t   c tct   g   t   c   t tct   g   t ! W.T. 


       Linker 1----------------------> Domain 2--------------->


       119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 


        G   G   S   E   G   G   G   T   K   P   P   E   Y   G   D 


  355 |ggT|GGA|TCC|gaA|ggA|ggT|ggA|acC|aaG|ccG|ccG|gaA|taT|ggC|gaC|


         c   t   t   g   t   c   t   t   a   t   t   g   c   t   t ! W.T. 


           BamHI..(2/2) 


       134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 


        T   P   I   P   G   Y   T   Y   I   N   P   L   D   G   T 


  400 |acT|ccG|atA|CCT|GGT|taC|acC|taC|atT|aaT|ccG|TtA|gaT|ggA|acC|


         a   t   t   g   c   t   t   t   c   c   t c c   c   c   t ! W.T. 


                 SexAI.... 


       149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 


        Y   P   P   G   T   E   Q   N   P   A   N   P   N   P   S 


  445 |taC|ccT|ccG|ggC|acC|gaA|caG|aaT|ccT|gcC|aaC|ccG|aaC|ccA|AGC|


         T   G   t   t   t   g   a   c   c   t   t   t   t   t tct ! W.T. 


                                                             HindIII... 


       164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 


        L   E   E   S   Q   P   L   N   T   F   M   F   Q   N   N 


  490 |TTA|gaA|qaA|AGC|caA|ccG|TtA|aaC|acC|ttT|atg|ttC|caA|aaC|aaC|


       c t   G   G tct   g   t c t   t   t   c       t   g   t   t ! W.T. 


 HindIII. 


       179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 


        R   F   R   N   R   Q   G   A   L   T   V   Y   T   G   T 


  535 |CgT|ttT|AgG|aaC|CgT|caA|gGT|GCT|CtT|acC|gTG|TAC|AcT|ggA|acC|


       a g   c c a   t a g   g   g   a t a   t   t   t   g   c   t ! W.T. 


                                HgiAI...        BsrGI... 


       194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 


        V   T   Q   G   T   D   P   V   K   T   Y   Y   Q   Y   T 


  580 |gtC|acC|caG|GGT|ACC|gaT|ccT|gtC|aaG|acC|taC|taT|caA|taT|acC|


         t   t   a   c   t   c   c   t   a   t   t   c   g   c   t ! W.T. 


                   KpnI... 


       209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 


        P   V   S   S   K   A   N   Y   D   A   Y   W   N   G   K 


  625 |ccG|gtC|TCG|AGt|aaG|gcT|atg|taC|gaT|gcC|taT|tgg|aaT|ggC|aaG|


         t   a   a tca   a   c       t   c   t   c       c   t   a ! W.T. 


         BsaI.... 


             XhoI.... 


       224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 


        F   R   D   C   A   F   H   S   G   F   N   E   D   P   F 


  670 |ttT|CgT|gaT|tgT|gcC|ttT|caC|AGG|ggT|ttC|aaC|gaa|gac|CCt|ttT|


         C A a   C   c   t   c   t tct   c   t   t   G   T   a   c ! W.T. 


       239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 


        V   C   E   Y   Q   G   Q   S   S   D   L   P   Q   P   P 


  715 |gtC|tgC|gaG|taC|caG|ggT|caG|AGT|AGC|gaT|TtA|ccG|caG|ccA|CCG|


         t   t   a   t   a   c   a tcg tct   c c g   t   a   t   t ! W.T. 


DrdI......                                                   AgeI..... 


  Domain 2---------> Linker 2---------------------->


        254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 


         V   N   A   G   G   G   S   G   G   G   S   G   G   G   S 


  760  |GTT|AAC|gcG|ggT|ggT|ggT|AGC|ggC|ggA|ggC|AGC|ggC|ggT|ggT|AGC|


          c   t   t   c   c   c tct   t   t   t tct   t   c   c tct ! W.T. 


AgeI 


        HpaI... 


        HincII. 


       Linker 2----------------------------------------------> Domain 3-->


       269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 


        E   G   G   G   S   E   G   G   G   S   G   G   G   S   G 


  805 |gaA|ggC|ggA|ggT|AGC|gaA|ggA|ggT|ggC|AGC|ggA|ggC|ggT|AGC|ggC|


         g   t   t   c tct   g   t   c   t tct   g   t   c tct   t  ! W.T. 


       ------------Domain 3------------------->


       284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 


        S   G   D   F   D   Y   E   K   M   A   N   A   N   K   G 


  850 |AGT|ggC|gac|ttc|gac|tac|gag|aaa|atg|gct|aat|gcc|aac|aaa|GGC|


       tcc   t   t   t   t   t   a   g       a   c   t   t   g   g ! W.T. 


                                                               KasI.... 


       299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 


        A   M   T   E   N   A   D   E   N   A   L   Q   S   D   A 


  895 |GCC|atg|act|gag|aac|gct|gac|gaG|AAT|GCA|ctg|caa|agt|gat|gCC|


         t       c   a   t   c   t   a   c   g   a   g tct   c   t ! W.T. 


  KasI....                           BsmI....                   StyI... 


       314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 


        K   G   K   L   D   S   V   A   T   D   Y   G   A   A   I 


  940 |AAG|GGt|aag|tta|gac|agc|gTC|GCc|Aca|gac|tat|ggT|GCt|gcc|atc|


         a   c   a c t   t tct       t   t   t   c           t 


StyI........           Pf1FI...... 


       329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 


        D   G   F   I   G   D   V   S   G   L   A   N   G   N   G 


  985 |gac|ggc|ttt|atc|ggc|gat|gtc|agt|ggt|ctg|gct|aac|ggc|aac|gga|


         t   t   c   t   t   c   t tcc   c c t       t   t   t   t ! W.T. 


       344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 


        A   T   G   D   F   A   G   S   N   S 


 1030 |gcc|acc|gga|gac|ttc|GCA|GGT|tcG|AAT|TCt|


         t   t   t   t   t   t   c   t       c ! W.T. 


                                BstBI... 


                                    EccRI... 


                          BspMI.. 


       354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 


        Q   M   A   Q   V   G   D   G   D   N 


 1060  cag atg TcA CAG GTT GGA GAT GGg gac aac 


        a       t   a   c   t   c   t   t   t ! W.T. 


                 XcmI................ 


      364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 


       S   P   L   M   N   N   F   R   Q   Y   L   P   S   L   P   Q 


 1090 agt ccg ctt atg aac aac ttt aga cag tac ctt ccg tct ctt ccg cag 


      tca   t t a       t   t   c c t   a   t t a   t   c   c   t   a ! W.T. 


      380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 


       S   V   E   C   F   P   F   V   F   S   A   G   K   P   Y   E 


 1138 agt gtc gag tgc cgt cca ttc att ttc tct gcc ggc aag cct tac gag 


      tcg   t   a   t   c   t   t   c   t agc   t   t   a   a   t   a ! W.T. 


      Domain 3-------------------------------------->


      396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 


       F   S   I   D   C   D   K   I   N   L   F   R 


 1186 ttc aGC Atc gac TGC gat aag atc aat ctt ttC CGC 


        t tCt   t   t   t   c   a   a   c t a       t 


           BstAPI........                       SacII... 


      transmembrane segment------------->


      408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 


       G   V   F   A   F   L   L   Y   V   A   T   F   M   Y   V   F 


 1222 GGc gtt ttc gct tcc ttg cta tac gtc gct act ttc atg tac gtt ttc 


        t   c   t   g   t c t t a   t   t   c   c   t       t   a   t ! W.T. 


      424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 


       S   T   F   A   N   I   L   R   N   K   E   S 


 1270 aGC ACT TTC GCC AAT ATT TTA Cac aac aaa gaa agc 


      tct   g   t   t   c   a c g   t   t   g   g tct ! W.T. 


 Intracellular anchor. 


               .   .


 1306         tag tga tct CCT AGG 


                          AvrII.. 


 1321 aag ccc gcc taa tga gcg ggc ttt ttt ttt ct ggt 


        | Trp terminator                     |


 End Fab cassette 


--------------------------- End of Table -----------------------
















TABLE 39 





ONs to make deletions in III 















ONs for use with NheI 


                                                                          N 


(SEQ ID NO: 595) 


(ON_G29bot) 5′-c gTT gAT ATc gcT Agc cTA Tgc-3′


22 


this is the reverse complement of 5′-gca tag gct aac gat atc aac g-3′   !


                                             NheI... scab......... 


(ON_G104top) 5′-g|ata|ggc|tta|gcT|aGC|ccg|gag|aac|gaa|gg-3′             ! 30





(SEQ ID NO: 596) 


                Scab..........NheI... 104 105 106 107 108 


(ON_G236top) 5′-c|ttt|cac|agc|ggt|ttc|GCT|AGC|gac|cct|ttt|gtc|tgc-3′    ! 37


(SEQ ID NO: 597) 


                                      NheI... 236 237 238 239 240 


(ON_G236tCS) 5′-c|ttt|cac|agc|ggt|ttc|GCT|AGC|gac|cct|ttt|gtc|Ago- 


                                      NheI... 236 237 238 239 240 


                gag|tac|cag|ggt|c-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 598) 


  50 





ONs for use with SphI G CAT Gc 


(ON_X37bot)     5′-gAc TgT cTc ggc Agc ATg cgc cAT Acg ATc ATc gTT a-3′ ! 37 


(SEQ ID NO: 599) 


                         N   D   D   R   M   A   H   A  (SEQ ID NO: 601) 


(ON_X37bot) = [RC] 5′-c aac gat gat cgt atg gcG CAt Gct gcc gag aca gtc-3′


                               (SEQ ID NO: 600) 


                                             SphI....Scab...........


(ON_X104top) 5′-g|gtG ccg|ata|ggc|ttG|CAT|GCa|ccg|gag|aac|gaa|gg-3′     ! 36 


(SEQ ID NO: 617) 


                Scab Sphi.... 104 105 106 107 108 


(ON_X236top) 5′-c|ttt|cac|agc|ggt|ttG|CaT|gCa|gac|cct|ttt|gtc|tgc-3′    ! 37 


(SEQ ID NO: 602) 


                                    SphI.... 236 237 238 239 240 


(ON_X236tCS) 5′-c|ttt|cac|agc|ggt|ttG|CaT|gCa|gac|cct|ttt|gtc|Agc- 


                                      NheI... 236 237 238 239 240 


                gag|tac|cag|ggt|c-3′ (SEQ ID NO: 603) 


  50 
















TABLE 40







Phage titers and enrichments of a selections


with a DY3F31-based human Fab library











Input
Output
Output/input



(total cfu)
(total cfu)
ratio





R1-ox
4.5 x 1012
3.4 x 105
7.5 x 10−8


selected on





phOx-BSA





R2-Strep
9.2 x 1012
  3 x 108
3.3 x 10−5


selected on





Strep-beads
















TABLE 41







Frequency of ELISA positives in DY3F31-based Fab libraries











Anti-M13
9E10/RAM-
Anti-CK/CL



HRP
HRP
Gar-HRP





R2-ox
18/44
10/44
10/44


(with IPTG induction)





R2-ox (without IPTG)
13/44
ND
ND


R3-strep (with IPTG)
39/44
38/44
36/44


R3-strep (without IPTG)
33/44
ND
ND








Claims
  • 1.-116. (canceled)
  • 117. A method of producing a library of immunoglobulin genes, the method comprising: (i) providing a nucleic acid comprising a heavy chain variable region (VH) framework, which comprises a framework region 1 (FW1), a complementary determining region 1 (CDR2), a framework region 2 (FW2), a complementary determining region 2 (CDR2), a framework region 3 (FW3), a complementary determining region 3 (CDR3), and a framework 4 (FR4) in the orientation of FW1-CDR 1-FW2-CDR2-FW3-CDR3-FW4;(ii) introducing synthetic diversity into at least one of the CDR1 and CDR2 in the VH framework; and(iii) introducing natural diversity into the CDR3 in the VH framework, wherein the natural diversity of the CDR3 is captured from VH CDR3 regions of immunoglobulin genes from B cells; thereby producing a first set of immunoglobulin genes encoding a plurality of immunoglobulin heavy chain variable regions.
  • 118. The method of claim 117, wherein synthetic diversity is introduced into both the CDR1 and CDR2 in the VH framework.
  • 119. The method of claim 117, wherein the VH framework is a human 3-23 framework.
  • 120. The method of claim 117, wherein: (a) the synthetic diversity of VH CDR1 is represented by the formula -X1-Y-X2-M-X3-(SEQ ID NO: 636), in which X1, X2, and X3 are independently selected from the group consisting of A, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, and Y; and(b) the synthetic diversity of VH CDR2 is represented by the formula X4-I-X5-X6-S-G-G-X7-T-X8-Y-A-D-S-V-K-G- (SEQ ID NO: 637), in which X4 and X5 are independently selected from the group consisting of Y, R, W, V, G, and S, X6 is selected from the group consisting of P and S, and X7 and X8 are independently selected from the group consisting of A, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, and Y.
  • 121. The method of claim 117, wherein: (a) the synthetic diversity of VH CDR1 is represented by the formula -X1-Y-X2-M-X3-(SEQ ID NO: 636), in which X1, X2, and X3 are independently a mixture of A, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, and Y; and(b) the synthetic diversity of VH CDR2 is represented by the formula X4-I-X5-X6-S-G-G-X7-T-X8-Y-A-D-S-V-K-G- (SEQ ID NO: 637), in which X4 and X5 are independently a mixture of Y, R, W, V, G, and S, X6 is a mixture of P and S, and X7 and X8 are independently a mixture of A, D, E, F, G, H, I, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, V, W, and Y.
  • 122. The method of claim 117, further comprising combining the first set of immunoglobulin genes with a second set of immunoglobulin genes encoding a plurality of antibody light chain variable regions.
  • 123. The method of claim 122, wherein the second set of immunoglobulin genes are derived from immunoglobulin light chain genes from B cells.
  • 124. The method of claim 117, wherein the B cells are from a human patient having an autoimmune disease.
  • 125. The method of claim 124, wherein the autoimmune disease is selected from the group consisting of systemic lupus erythematosus, systemic sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, antiphospholipid syndrome and vasculitis.
  • 126. The method of claim 117, wherein the first set of immunoglobulin genes are in phage vectors or in phagemid vectors.
  • 127. The method of claim 126, wherein the phage vectors or phagemid vectors collectively further comprise a second set of immunoglobulin genes encoding immunoglobulin light chain variable regions.
  • 128. The method of claim 126, wherein the first set of immunoglobulin genes are linked via a short linker to the final portion of M 13 gene III.
  • 129. The method of claim 126, wherein the phage vectors further comprise a wild-type gene III and a truncated gene III.
  • 130. The method of claim 122, further comprising introducing the first set and second set of immunoglobulin genes into host cells to produce a plurality of genetic packages expressing the plurality of immunoglobulins encoded by the first set and second set of immunoglobulin genes.
  • 131. The method of claim 130, wherein the genetic packages are filamentous phage particles or yeast cells.
  • 132. The method of claim 130, wherein the plurality of immunoglobulins are displayed on the surface of the genetic packages.
Parent Case Info

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/464,047, filed May 4, 2012, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,901,045, issued Dec. 2, 2014, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/045,674, filed Oct. 25, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,288,322, issued Oct. 16, 2012, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/000,516, filed Oct. 24, 2001 (now abandoned), which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/837,306, filed on Apr. 17, 2001 (abandoned), which claims the benefit from U.S. provisional application 60/198,069, filed Apr. 17, 2000. All of the earlier applications are specifically incorporated by reference herein.

Provisional Applications (1)
Number Date Country
60198069 Apr 2000 US
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 14557171 Dec 2014 US
Child 15612938 US
Continuations (2)
Number Date Country
Parent 13464047 May 2012 US
Child 14557171 US
Parent 10045674 Oct 2001 US
Child 13464047 US
Continuation in Parts (3)
Number Date Country
Parent 10000516 Oct 2001 US
Child 10045674 US
Parent 09837306 Apr 2001 US
Child 10000516 US
Parent 09837306 Apr 2001 US
Child 10045674 US