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Antibody Production Shared Resource

$111,084P30FY2018CANIH

Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville TN

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07016399Trial NCT06593106Trial NCT05501665Trial NCT05361720Trial NCT04765072Trial NCT02702310Trial NCT02685631Trial NCT02677883Trial NCT02676752Trial NCT02672475Trial NCT02658487Trial NCT02600533Trial NCT02489422Trial NCT02480114Trial NCT02457910Trial NCT02448225Trial NCT02440737Trial NCT02374931Trial NCT02359851Trial NCT02324881Trial NCT02296112Trial NCT02269111Trial NCT02240381Trial NCT02236546Trial NCT02170272Trial NCT02151539Trial NCT02148406Trial NCT01996527Trial NCT01928160Trial NCT01901367Trial NCT01660971Trial NCT01230515Trial NCT01198535Trial NCT01141218Trial NCT01098669Trial NCT01098643Trial NCT01096407Trial NCT01096394Trial NCT01096381Trial NCT01077440Trial NCT01031446Trial NCT01013506Trial NCT01009931Trial NCT01007422Trial NCT00993694Trial NCT00993135Trial NCT00987766Trial NCT00984542Trial NCT00984490Trial NCT00983268Trial NCT00957736Trial NCT00949052Trial NCT00930930Trial NCT00900406Trial NCT00900003Trial NCT00899769Trial NCT00899626Trial NCT00899457Trial NCT00899301Trial NCT00899028Trial NCT00898742Trial NCT00898638Trial NCT00898430Trial NCT00898313Trial NCT00897988Trial NCT00897832Trial NCT00897793Trial NCT00897650Trial NCT00897468Trial NCT00897403Trial NCT00897117Trial NCT00896948Trial NCT00896675Trial NCT00892801Trial NCT00875238Trial NCT00840814Trial NCT00837876Trial NCT00835679Trial NCT00801346Trial NCT00765245Trial NCT00755040Trial NCT00675636Trial NCT00670644Trial NCT00670605Trial NCT00670046Trial NCT00666211Trial NCT00656604Trial NCT00653250Trial NCT00651976Trial NCT00651716Trial NCT00647218Trial NCT00626873Trial NCT00625417Trial NCT00625066Trial NCT00616590Trial NCT00601991Trial NCT00573404Trial NCT00550537Trial NCT00544648Trial NCT00533884

Abstract

BASIC RESEARCH GROUP CORE 003 ? ANTIBODY PRODUCTION SHARED RESOURCE PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Over the past two decades the view of monoclonal antibody utility has grown from valuable scientific reagents to include exciting and potent therapeutics. Over thirty monoclonal antibody?based therapies are now approved for human use in the U.S. and Europe, with nearly one-half of these therapeutics directed at cancer- relevant targets. In cancer research, the value of high-quality antibody reagents is impossible to overstate. A preponderance of molecular assays partially or completely depend upon the function of highly specific antibodies. Though there has been an explosion of commercially available antibodies, considerable variability remains in the actual specificity and utility of many of these reagents. Moreover, as research continues to progress, increasingly more challenging antibody needs continue to emerge (modification-specific antibodies, conformation- and isoform-specific antibodies, functional neutralizing or activating antibodies, etc.). For these reasons, the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center (VICC) has continuously maintained and supported a vibrant antibody development infrastructure. The Antibody Production Shared Resource (APSR) provides a full range of services supporting all manner of antibody-related projects (polyclonals, monoclonals, recombinant antibodies and antibody engineering, etc.). In addition to making antibodies, the APSR has continued to expand its suite of protein production services to include both antigens and customized functional recombinant proteins (e.g., growth factors, cytokines, etc.). This service is very cost efficient, has opened yet more tools for VICC researchers to obtain valuable reagents and has already successfully delivered critical recombinant proteins at a fraction of the commercial price. This robust suite of protein production and purification capabilities, along with our hybridoma services, provides unique capabilities for the VICC investigators. The proposed additions of in-house rabbit monoclonal antibody development, antibody humanization, and offering an expanded antibody and protein reagent catalog will further add to the technological and economic benefits this facility offers to VICC researchers.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →