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Exploiting human immune repertoire transgenic mice for protective monoclonal antibodies against antimicrobial resistant Acinetobacter baumannii.

Megan E CareyAishwarya KrishnaSophie HighamPlamena NaydenovaSiobhan O'LearyJosefin Bartholdson ScottKatherine HarcourtSally ForrestDavid GouldingTo Nguyen Thi NguyenNguyen Duc ToanElizaveta AlekseevaQingqing ZhouIlaria AndreozziBarbara SoboticHannah CraigVivian WongNichola Forrest-OwenDana Moreno SanchezClaire PearceLeah W RobertsSimon J WatsonSimon ClareMichelle S TolemanGordon DouganPaul KellamJohn S TregoningStephen T Reece
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
The use of monoclonal antibodies for the control of drug resistant nosocomial bacteria may alleviate a reliance on broad spectrum antimicrobials for treatment of infection. We identify monoclonal antibodies that may prevent infection caused by carbapenem resistant Acinetobacter baumannii. We use human immune repertoire mice (Kymouse platform mice) as a surrogate for human B cell interrogation to establish an unbiased strategy to probe the antibody-accessible target landscape of clinically relevant A. baumannii. After immunisation of the Kymouse platform mice with A. baumannii derived outer membrane vesicles (OMV) we identify 297 antibodies and analyse 26 of these for functional potential. These antibodies target lipooligosaccharide (OCL1), the Oxa-23 protein, and the KL49 capsular polysaccharide. We identify a single monoclonal antibody (mAb1416) recognising KL49 capsular polysaccharide to demonstrate prophylactic in vivo protection against a carbapenem resistant A. baumannii lineage associated with neonatal sepsis mortality in Asia. Our end-to-end approach identifies functional monoclonal antibodies with prophylactic potential against major lineages of drug resistant bacteria accounting for phylogenetic diversity and clinical relevance without existing knowledge of a specific target antigen. Such an approach might be scaled for a additional clinically important bacterial pathogens in the post-antimicrobial era.
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