Review abstract
Nature Biotechnology 25, 1421 - 1434 (2007)
Published online: 7 December 2007 | doi:10.1038/nbt1363
The growth and potential of human antiviral monoclonal antibody therapeutics
Wayne A Marasco1 & Jianhua Sui1
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) have long provided powerful research tools for virologists to understand the mechanisms of virus entry into host cells and of antiviral immunity. Even so, commercial development of human (or humanized) mAbs for the prophylaxis, preemptive and acute treatment of viral infections has been slow. This is surprising, as new antibody discovery tools have increased the speed and precision with which potent neutralizing human antiviral mAbs can be identified. As longstanding barriers to antiviral mAb development, such as antigenic variability of circulating viral strains and the ability of viruses to undergo neutralization escape, are being overcome, deeper insight into the mechanisms of mAb action and engineering of effector functions are also improving the efficacy of antiviral mAbs. These successes, in both industrial and academic laboratories, coupled with ongoing changes in the biomedical and regulatory environments, herald an era when the commercial development of human antiviral mAb therapies will likely surge.
- Department of Cancer Immunology & AIDS, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School 44, Binney Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Correspondence to: Wayne A Marasco1 e-mail: wayne_marasco@dfci.harvard.edu
Correspondence to: Jianhua Sui1 e-mail: jianhua_sui@dfci.harvard.edu
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