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Career Shorts Ep 2 – Dr Nimish Gera

October 18, 2021 by Raquel Ferro

After the launch of our new Career Shorts series last week, we are proud to release our second episode with Dr Nimish Gera, Head of Biologics at Mythic Therapeutics! Check out our new episode via our new YouTube channel using the link below.

Career Shorts Ep 2: https://youtu.be/kOpuBxNdS5A

 

Our previous episode (Ep 1 with Dr Li Zhou): https://youtu.be/Y9xtGRLQaSM
Career shorts webpage: https://www.antibodysociety.org/career-shorts/

About Career shorts:

In this series, we talk to scientists and individuals working within the world of antibodies about the experiences that have shaped their careers and have got them to where they are today. Our goal by sharing their experiences and advice is to empower the next generation of scientists and leaders working in this field and beyond to make confident and empowered decisions.

Filed Under: Antibody discovery, Careers Tagged With: antibody discovery, antibody engineering, Careers

2021 James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award winner is announced!

October 15, 2021 by Janice Reichert

We are delighted to announce that Dr. Laura M. Walker has been selected as the 2021 James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award Recipient!

Dr. Walker is the Senior Director of Antibody Sciences at Adimab and the Chief Scientific Officer and a co-founder of Adagio Therapeutics. Her team at Adimab is focused on understanding human B cell responses to viral infection and discovering broadly neutralizing antibodies to a wide variety of emerging viral pathogens, including Ebola, Zika, yellow fever, and SARS-CoV-2. At Adagio, Laura oversees a broad portfolio of research in the area of viral immunology, including the identification of potent and broadly neutralizing antibodies to advance into clinical development. Prior to joining Adimab in 2012, Dr. Walker earned her Ph.D. in Immunology and Microbiology in Prof. Dennis Burton’s laboratory at The Scripps Research Institute and completed a post-doctoral research fellowship in Immunology at The University of California-San Francisco. Dr. Walker has received multiple fellowships and awards, including the Endpoints News “The 20 under 40 in biopharma” award in 2020.

The James S. Huston Antibody Science Talent Award is sponsored by The Antibody Society to recognize and encourage upcoming scientists in the field of Antibody Engineering and Therapeutics. Early career research scientists who have received an advanced degree (Ph.D., M.D., or equivalent) within the past ten (10) years are eligible for the Award. The scientist is recognized for making important contributions to the antibody field and/or the dissemination of antibody knowledge. The recipient will be invited to give a lecture on their work, which will be made available on-line on The Antibody Society’s website, and to give a lecture at the Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics conference in December 2021.

The award includes: international recognition of the scientist’s accomplishments, a $1500 USD prize, and travel costs and registration fees to attend the annual Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics conference in San Diego, California.
 

Filed Under: Huston Award Tagged With: antibody engineering, Huston Award

Career Shorts

October 11, 2021 by Raquel Ferro

The Antibody Society is proud to present Career Shorts!

In this series, we talk to scientists and individuals working within the world of antibodies about the experiences that have shaped their careers and have got them to where they are today. Our goal by sharing their experiences and advice is to empower the next generation of scientists and leaders working in this field and beyond to make confident and empowered decisions.

We kick off our first episode by talking to Dr Li Zhou, principle scientist at AbbVie. This episode and more will be made accessible via our new YouTube channel. Check out the full interview in the link below and stay tuned for more exciting releases!

 

Career Shorts Ep 1: Dr Li Zhou: https://youtu.be/Y9xtGRLQaSM
Career shorts webpage: https://www.antibodysociety.org/career-shorts/

Filed Under: Antibody discovery, Career Shorts, Uncategorized Tagged With: antibody discovery, antibody engineering, career shorts, Careers

Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics Europe Poster Competition

March 9, 2021 by The Antibody Society

Attention Student and Post-doc Members!

The Antibody Engineering & Therapeutics Europe Poster Competition is now open.

This virtual meeting will be held June 8-10, 2021.

To recognize the research activities of promising student and postdoctoral members, The Antibody Society is sponsoring a poster competition for these members in which two winners will be selected to receive:

  • Free registration to attend this virtual conference;
  • An opportunity to present a virtual poster during the conference; 
  • A Digital Badge as a Winner of the Poster Competition; and
  • The Antibody Society’s Award of Excellence (shown above).

In order to be considered for this poster competition, you must be a student or postdoctoral fellow member of The Antibody Society and your poster abstract must be submitted using the poster submission form. Please be sure to check the box on the poster submission form indicating that you want your abstract to be considered for the poster competition.

The Poster submission deadline is April 30, 2021.
Winners will be notified by May 7, 2021.

Submit your poster here!

Poster abstracts may be submitted and accepted for presentation at the conference after April 30th, but any submissions received after April 30 will not be considered for the poster competition.

Not a member? Please join!

Filed Under: Competition, The Antibody Society Tagged With: antibody engineering, competition

In memoriam: Jefferson Foote

December 23, 2020 by The Antibody Society

Written by:
E. Sally Ward (a), Peter Jones (b), Tim Buss (c), Cristina Rada (d), Gregory Winter (e) and Richard Willson (f)

a Centre for Cancer Immunology, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK
b Lode, Cambridge, UK
c Proteogenomics Research Institute for Systems Medicine, San Diego, USA
d MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK
e Trinity College, Cambridge, UK
f Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Houston, Houston, TX, USA

Photo courtesy of Kathleen Foote.

Jefferson (Jeff) Foote sadly passed away of pancreatic cancer on January 17, 2020 at the age of 64.  He was a leading figure in physical immunochemistry and antibody humanization, a polymath of broad interests, and a wonderful friend and colleague.  Jeff was born in Chicago and grew up in Tarrytown, NY. Following graduation from Harvard University where he worked in the laboratory of William Lipscomb, he earned his Ph.D. at Berkeley with Howard Schachman, studying the canonical aspartate transcarbamylase system.  In 1985 he moved to the Laboratory of Molecular Biology (LMB) in Cambridge, where he worked with (now Sir) Greg Winter and then with Cesar Milstein. During his time in Cambridge, Jeff applied his understanding of protein biophysics and interaction kinetics to address problems in immunochemistry, increasingly leveraging the availability of the first emerging crystal structures of antibody-antigen complexes. This was before the BIAcore/surface plasmon resonance era that started in the early 1990s, and the work required a comprehensive knowledge of the inner workings of fluorometers, including stop-flow, and the associated mathematical tools. Jeff imported a Macintosh (“Mac”) culture to the laboratory, which was well-received by other local Mac fans in days when benchtop computers were still something of a novelty and there was a threat of other personal computer models becoming the norm.

Whilst at the LMB, Jeff made significant contributions in areas ranging from state-of-the-art antibody engineering to fundamental aspects of B cell biology, including the first description of the CDR grafting, or humanization, of an antibody specific for a hapten.[1] Jeff applied his expertise to determine the affinities of the test grafts, enabling the design principles of the engineered antibodies to be verified in precise, quantitative terms. This seminal study formed the foundation for the subsequent avalanche of therapeutic antibody humanizations, the first of which was the CD52-specific antibody Campath-1 (Alemtuzumab) generated in the Winter/Waldmann laboratories and used to treat chronic lymphocytic leukemia and multiple sclerosis. In addition, Jeff used the first antibody to be structurally solved in complex with antigen, the anti-lysozyme antibody D1.3, to define how framework residue modifications could restore binding behavior close to that of the donor (rodent) antibody to a humanized antibody.[2] As well as the biophysical characterization of framework mutants, he was also the first to synthesize a “consensus” framework.[2,3]

In parallel to Jeff’s work on antibody humanization, he carried out an extensive analysis with Cesar Milstein on how the maturation of the immune response is accompanied by an increased on-rate of antibodies for binding to their antigen. This study led to the paradigm that the selection of the “fittest” B cells is driven by interaction kinetics.[4] Subsequently, in a second publication with Cesar, Jeff observed that antibodies could undergo switching between different conformations (“conformational isomerism”), resulting in bi- or triphasic interaction kinetics.[5] This not only provided a molecular mechanism for the further diversification of antibodies, but also challenged the longstanding axiom that each lymphocyte produces an antibody with a single combining site.

Jeff was one of those more civilized members of the LMB who drove into work, rather than arriving with the appearance of a half-drowned rat following a cycle ride in the wintry, wet days that were common in Cambridge. Whilst working with Greg Winter in the tiny 5-6 person laboratory known as T4, Jeff relished being in the thick of the day-to-day, frequently frenetic activities. The day usually started with copious quantities of “Java”, an almost toxic, viscous dark brown liquid that kept the group members charged and running. Given that antibody humanization and, subsequently, antibody repertoire work were ongoing in the laboratory at this time, there was rarely a dull moment.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Antibody discovery, Jeff Foote Tagged With: antibody discovery, antibody engineering

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