Table 1.
Method | Production of mAb | Sequencing | Selection bias1 | Advantages | Disadvantages |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antibody phage display | scFv, Fab (Ig) | Directly from phage display vector | + | Relative ease of screening, sequencing, and production of soluble protein; depth of coverage; ease of adapting isotype-specific applications | Random pairing of VH and VL, tedious Ig production (subcloning required) |
Heterohybridoma | Ig | RT-PCR | + | In vivo VH/VL pairing, production of full-length Ig | EBV/unselected fusions often yield IgM, instability phenomena and inefficient isolation, expensive culturing |
Single B-cell PCR | (Ig) | RT-PCR | + | In vivo VH/VL pairing | Difficult mAb production (subcloning), difficult for rare clones |
Deep sequencing | None | From any nucleotide source | – | No selection bias, calculation of frequencies | Necessary trade-off of sequencing length and read number; no pairing of VH and VL for analysis |
Advancements and combinations of the methods detailed above may pave the way for future studies of unparalleled depth and accuracy (see DeKosky et al., 2013, and others).
EBV, Epstein–Barr virus; scFv, single-chain variable fragment; VH, variable heavy; VL, variable light.
Selection bias may result from differences in phage growth rates, instability of cell fusions, or limited numbers of B cells analyzed by single B-cell PCR. These effects may lead to nonrepresentative (biased) distributions of the parameters analyzed.