The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin

The Wnt signalling pathway is of central importance in embryogenesis and adult tissue homeostasis, as well as numerous cancers and other diseases. Despite the developmental and potential therapeutic significance of this pathway many aspects of Wnt signalling, including the role of the master transcr...

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Main Author: Newnham, Laura Ellen
Published: University of Leeds 2012
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713515
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7135152017-08-30T03:27:06ZThe investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-cateninNewnham, Laura Ellen2012The Wnt signalling pathway is of central importance in embryogenesis and adult tissue homeostasis, as well as numerous cancers and other diseases. Despite the developmental and potential therapeutic significance of this pathway many aspects of Wnt signalling, including the role of the master transcriptional co-activator, J3-catenin, remain poorly understood. This thesis describes the derivation of VHH intracellular antibodies, with specificity for β-catenin, and their application to the study of the canonical Wnt signalling pathway. Intracellular antibodies, intrabodies, are engineered antibody fragments capable of binding and modifying the function of intracellular proteins, and represent valuable tools for the study of intracellular interactions. The aim of the work was to further the understanding of the regulation of β-catenin, and potentially to use the intrabodies as tools to identify sites on β-catenin for future therapeutic intervention. A diverse immune llama VIM phagemid library was constructed, from which five antibodies with 3-6nM affinity for β-catenin were selected, and demonstrated function-modifying intracellular activity in a luciferase based Wnt signalling reporter bioassay. Control Ala-substituted CDR3 mutants were produced for each intrabody, and used to demonstrate the specific inhibition of β-catenin activity by the parent intrabodies. Further characterisation of intrabody LL3 demonstrated that it bound endogenous 13- catenin specifically and inhibited the Wnt signalling pathway downstream of the destruction complex. The binding location of LL3 on β-catenin Was shown to reside between residues 164 and 390, which overlaps with the binding domains of several transcription factors on β-catenin. This work is thought to represent the first report of functional inhibition of β-catenin-mediated co-activation of transcription by an intrabody, and further study of the method of action of function-modifying VHH intrabodies to β-catenin may enable the identification of novel sites for therapeutic intervention on the Wnt signalling pathway.616.07University of Leedshttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713515Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 616.07
spellingShingle 616.07
Newnham, Laura Ellen
The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
description The Wnt signalling pathway is of central importance in embryogenesis and adult tissue homeostasis, as well as numerous cancers and other diseases. Despite the developmental and potential therapeutic significance of this pathway many aspects of Wnt signalling, including the role of the master transcriptional co-activator, J3-catenin, remain poorly understood. This thesis describes the derivation of VHH intracellular antibodies, with specificity for β-catenin, and their application to the study of the canonical Wnt signalling pathway. Intracellular antibodies, intrabodies, are engineered antibody fragments capable of binding and modifying the function of intracellular proteins, and represent valuable tools for the study of intracellular interactions. The aim of the work was to further the understanding of the regulation of β-catenin, and potentially to use the intrabodies as tools to identify sites on β-catenin for future therapeutic intervention. A diverse immune llama VIM phagemid library was constructed, from which five antibodies with 3-6nM affinity for β-catenin were selected, and demonstrated function-modifying intracellular activity in a luciferase based Wnt signalling reporter bioassay. Control Ala-substituted CDR3 mutants were produced for each intrabody, and used to demonstrate the specific inhibition of β-catenin activity by the parent intrabodies. Further characterisation of intrabody LL3 demonstrated that it bound endogenous 13- catenin specifically and inhibited the Wnt signalling pathway downstream of the destruction complex. The binding location of LL3 on β-catenin Was shown to reside between residues 164 and 390, which overlaps with the binding domains of several transcription factors on β-catenin. This work is thought to represent the first report of functional inhibition of β-catenin-mediated co-activation of transcription by an intrabody, and further study of the method of action of function-modifying VHH intrabodies to β-catenin may enable the identification of novel sites for therapeutic intervention on the Wnt signalling pathway.
author Newnham, Laura Ellen
author_facet Newnham, Laura Ellen
author_sort Newnham, Laura Ellen
title The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
title_short The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
title_full The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
title_fullStr The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
title_full_unstemmed The investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
title_sort investigation of intracellular antibodies to beta-catenin
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.713515
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