key: cord-0004344-da4pl2cj authors: Wenzel, Esther Veronika; Bosnak, Margarita; Tierney, Robert; Schubert, Maren; Brown, Jeffrey; Dübel, Stefan; Efstratiou, Androulla; Sesardic, Dorothea; Stickings, Paul; Hust, Michael title: Human antibodies neutralizing diphtheria toxin in vitro and in vivo date: 2020-01-17 journal: Sci Rep DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-57103-5 sha: 6fab81eeec2dde6a9932a07fbc1467a3e51d6f3e doc_id: 4344 cord_uid: da4pl2cj Diphtheria is an infectious disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae. The bacterium primarily infects the throat and upper airways and the produced diphtheria toxin (DT), which binds to the elongation factor 2 and blocks protein synthesis, can spread through the bloodstream and affect organs, such as the heart and kidneys. For more than 125 years, the therapy against diphtheria has been based on polyclonal horse sera directed against DT (diphtheria antitoxin; DAT). Animal sera have many disadvantages including serum sickness, batch-to-batch variation in quality and the use of animals for production. In this work, 400 human recombinant antibodies were generated against DT from two different phage display panning strategies using a human immune library. A panning in microtiter plates resulted in 22 unique in vitro neutralizing antibodies and a panning in solution combined with a functional neutralization screening resulted in 268 in vitro neutralizing antibodies. 61 unique antibodies were further characterized as scFv-Fc with 35 produced as fully human IgG1. The best in vitro neutralizing antibody showed an estimated relative potency of 454 IU/mg and minimal effective dose 50% (MED50%) of 3.0 pM at a constant amount of DT (4x minimal cytopathic dose) in the IgG format. The targeted domains of the 35 antibodies were analyzed by immunoblot and by epitope mapping using phage display. All three DT domains (enzymatic domain, translocation domain and receptor binding domain) are targets for neutralizing antibodies. When toxin neutralization assays were performed at higher toxin dose levels, the neutralizing capacity of individual antibodies was markedly reduced but this was largely compensated for by using two or more antibodies in combination, resulting in a potency of 79.4 IU/mg in the in vivo intradermal challenge assay. These recombinant antibody combinations are candidates for further clinical and regulatory development to replace equine DAT. Selection and screening of anti-diphtheria toxin antibodies. For antibody selection, both VJN and CD138+ immune libraries were used. Two different panning and screening strategies were chosen for antibody selection. In the first approach, the antigen was immobilized on a microtiter plate (MTP) and the screening was performed by ELISA of secreted soluble scFv fragments to determine antigen binding. In the second strategy, a panning in solution was performed using biotinylated antigen followed by a functional screening of DT neutralization using the Vero cell assay. Using both approaches, 400 antibodies binding to DAT were selected in total. The overview showing all panning strategies and the subsequent steps is given in Table 1 . Using the first strategy relying on antigen immobilization on MTPs, 132 scFvs were isolated in total from both immune libraries. For the analysis of the individual antibody sequence, a BstNI digestion and agarose gel electrophoresis was initially performed to exclude duplicate clones which have identical digestion patterns (data not shown), followed by sequencing of the scFv encoding gene inserts. 101 of these scFv were identified as unique after sequencing. One antibody contained a stop codon in the sixth position of the VH chain (ewe192-B5), despite being produced in functional form in E. coli. For this antibody, the respective germline sequence (IGHV4-34*01) encodes the amino acid glutamine (Q) at position 6. After polymerase incomplete primer extension (PIPE) cloning, the stop codon was changed to the amino acid Q. This modified antibody was labelled as ewe192-B5(P). For all further characterizations, the scFv antibodies against DT were converted to an IgG-like scFv-Fc format. The genes encoding scFv antibody fragments were cloned into the pCSE2.7-hIgG1-Fc expression vector and produced as scFv-Fc. Table 1 . Overview of all selected antibodies separated by library type, light chain type, panning strategy, screening strategy and further production and characterization steps. *Three of the 15 antibodies were produced in two variants: (1) original phage display selected sequence and (2) modified framework 1 sequence according to the corresponding V-gene germline sequence. This data was generated in a PhD thesis 84 . In the second strategy using panning in solution, a pull down was performed using magnetic streptavidin beads to capture the antibody phage bound to the biotinylated DT in solution. The successful enrichment of DT-binding phage by panning in solution was followed by a phage ELISA (data not shown). The antibody pool was directly cloned into the vector pCSE2.7-hIgG1-Fc-XP for production as scFv-Fc fusions. 384 monoclonal scFv-Fc were selected for the screening assay. All antibodies were produced in EXPI293F cells in 96 deep well plates. The produced antibodies were secreted into the growth medium and the supernatant was used for performing the neutralization assay in Vero cells. A four-point serial dilution of the supernatant was incubated with a constant amount of diphtheria toxin (4 × minimal cytopathic dose, 4 × MCD) and, after 6 days of incubation with Vero cells, the cytopathic effect was measured with an Thiazolyl Blue Tetrazolium Bromide (MTT) assay. These produced antibodies were analyzed regarding their neutralization efficacy using the Vero cell TNT assay 47 (data not shown). In total, 268 scFv-Fc showed neutralization. The 36 antibodies showing the best neutralization were selected for further analysis. Three antibodies (ewe372-C10, ewe372-D3 and ewe372-H1) contained a stop codon in the sixth position of the VH chain. For these three antibodies, the corresponding germline gene (IGHV4-34) encodes the amino acid glutamine (Q) at position six. A point mutation was introduced to change the stop codon to the amino acid Q. These three antibodies had the amino acid Serin (S) at position 7 of VH, but according to the corresponding germ line gene, the amino acid tryptophan (W) should occur at this position. Hence, two versions were developed for each of the three antibodies and named after their seventh amino acid position ewe372-C10-S/ewe372-C10-W, ewe372-D3-S/ewe372-D3-W and ewe372-H1-S/ewe372-H1-W. After these modifications, a total of 39 scFv-Fc antibodies from the panning in solution were further analyzed. In vitro neutralization in scfv-fc format. The in vitro neutralization capacity of the 101 unique scFv-Fc derived from the panning in MTPs, and the 39 best neutralizing scFv-Fc derived from the panning in solution, were further analyzed to determine the minimal effective dose 50% (MED50%) (lowest antibody concentration with more than 50% neutralization efficacy) using the Vero cell TNT assay 47 . Here, a serial dilution of purified scFv-Fc was incubated with a constant amount of DT (4 × MCD) and the cytopathic effect was measured with an MTT assay. 22 of the 101 scFv-Fc derived from the panning in MTPs showed DT neutralization (Fig. 2) . The neutralization capacity of the scFv-Fc derived from the panning in solution are shown in Fig. 3 . The in vitro neutralization capacity was determined to be between 3.3 pM (3.7 × 10 −7 mg/mL) and 18.8 µM (2 mg/mL) at a constant amount of DT (4 × MCD) ( Table 2 ). Most of the scFv-Fc had a neutralization efficacy in the nanomolar range. The antibody germline V-genes of all 61 neutralizing antibodies are given in Table 3 . www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Dt binding in scfv-fc format determined by titration eLiSA. The half maximal effective concentration (EC50) was determined for the selected 61 neutralizing scFv-Fc antibodies by performing a titration ELISA on immobilized DT and the non-toxic mutant of DT, CRM197 which contains a point mutation in the catalytic domain 48, 49 (Fig. 4 and Table 2 ). The EC50 for DT ranged widely from 0.0086 µg/mL to 11.9 µg/mL. The non-toxic mutant CRM197 showed binding in the range of 0.0108 µg/mL to 18.4 µg/mL. Out of 61 scFv-Fc antibodies, 16 showed more than 3-fold decreased binding to the non-toxic DT-mutant CRM197 compared to DT. DT binding in IgG format determined by titration ELISA. 38 neutralizing scFv-Fc antibodies were cloned into the pCSEH1c (heavy chain) and pCSL3l/pCSL3k (light chain lambda/kappa) vectors 37 for production as human IgG1. The antibodies were chosen because of their neutralization efficacy as scFv-Fc but from antibodies which very similar CDRs only one representing antibody was chosen. Three of the antibodies were not producible in IgG format (ewe372-C10-S, ewe372-F3 and ewe374-F7). The remaining 35 IgG were titrated by ELISA against DT and CRM197 (Fig. 5 ). All IgG antibodies bound DT, but some antibodies showed a reduced affinity binding the non-toxic mutant CRM197. The EC50 ranged from 0.0182 µg/mL to 0.523 µg/mL for DT and from 0.0214 µg/mL to 40.08 µg/mL for CRM197 ( Table 2 ). Out of 35 IgG antibodies, 8 showed more than 3-fold www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ decreased binding to CRM197 compared to DT. DT binding by IgG differed from the corresponding scFv-Fc significantly only for a few antibodies. One IgG gained more than 3-fold EC50 (ewe192-D8) compared to the scFv-Fc format and two antibodies lost 3-fold EC50. In vitro neutralization in IgG format. The 35 IgG antibodies were tested for their ability to neutralize DT in the Vero cell TNT assay 47 (Fig. 6) . The MED50% of all purified IgG antibodies was between 3.0 pM and 1.4 µM at a constant amount of DT (4x MCD) ( Table 2 ). Only one antibody (ewe191-C10) lost complete neutralization capacity after conversion to the IgG format. Interestingly, 11 IgG had at least a 3-fold enhancement of the MED50% compared to the corresponding scFv-Fc. The antibody ewe191-A7 showed a more than 100x improved MED50% but the initial in vitro neutralization efficacy of this antibody was low. The MED50% did not change more than 3-fold for the antibodies with a high neutralization efficacy except for ewe192-B5(P) which showed a 10-fold improvement. Neutralizing potency was expressed in International Units (IU) per mg by comparison with the WHO International Standard for Diphtheria Antitoxin, Equine (NIBSC code 17/230). The results are summarized in Fig. 7 . The monoclonal antibodies showed a neutralization potency up to 455 IU/mg ( Table 2) . By comparison, a rat hybridoma antibody (DT05) and the corresponding recombinant version (rDT05) had a neutralization potency of 46.4 IU/mg and 36.6, IU/mg respectively. The neutralizing potency of a batch of equine DAT was also determined and, although not directly comparable, the specific activity was estimated to be approximately 50 IU/mg (based on total protein concentration of the purified antiserum). As an additional experiment, the best neutralizing antibodies were combined, but no synergistic effect was observed in the Vero cell assay using a DT dose of 4 × MCD (data not shown). To identify the individual domain targeted by the 35 antibodies, the A-and B-fragments, as well as the receptor binding (R) and translocation (T) domains alone, were produced in E. coli as recombinant proteins. Binding to the A-and B-fragments was first tested in scFv-Fc format by immunoblot (data not shown). For antibodies that were shown to bind the B-fragment, the antibody was further tested also on the Rand T-domains. The results are given in Table 4 . According to the domain mapping by immunoblot, 10 antibodies bound the R domain, 15 antibodies bound the C-domain and 1 antibody bound the T-domain. 4 antibodies bound the B-fragment, but did not bind separately to either the T-or R-domain alone, and for 4 antibodies it was not possible to determine the domain. These results showed that the majority of neutralizing antibodies were targeting the R domain. The best neutralizing antibodies against the R-domain were ewe375-D4 and ewe372-C10-W, the best IgG against the C-domain was ewe375-H4, and the best neutralizing antibody binding the T-domain was ewe372-F6. The antibody ewe372-C10-W was excluded from further analysis because the size exclusion chromatography (SEC) profile showed an increased formation of dimers (data not shown). epitope mapping using single gene phage display. To identify the epitopes, the DNA for the B-fragment and the sequence encoding the C-and T-domains were fragmented and two independent phage display libraries were constructed by cloning into the ORFeome phage display vector pHORF3 50 followed by packaging with Hyperphage for ORF selection to improve library quality. The library quality and the coverage of the complete DT gene was analyzed by sequencing of approximately 80 clones ( Supplementary Fig. 1) showing a nearly complete coverage of DT using this limited amount of sequences. We expected to get also overlapping C-T fragments and were surprised to get the most fragments at the beginning of the C or T domain. Subsequently, a panning was performed on 34 of the 35 best neutralizing antibodies in the scFv-Fc format using the A-and the B-fragment libraries separately. We excluded ewe191-C10 because this antibody lost neutralization capacity after conversion to the IgG format. Individual epitope phage clones from the second panning round were screened by ELISA. For 19 antibodies, the minimal epitope region (MER) was identified (Table 4 ). An overview of all identified MERs is given in Fig. 8 www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ For 13 antibodies the data were inconclusive because DT fragments of two epitope regions were selected and identified in the screening ELISA (e.g. for ewe192-F11 in Supplementary Fig. 2T ), or clones from one epitope region were identified but, in addition, more than one outlier in other DT regions or inverse clones were selected. For ewe372-H1-S, the outlier may be excluded because of the results derived from ewe372-H1-W which differs only by one amino acid in framework one. The length of the identified MERs ranged from 14 amino acids for ewe192-D8 to the complete C-domain for ewe372-D11 ewe374-H4. The domains identified using the immunoblot approach were always in accordance with the domains identified by epitope mapping. The combined results of the immunoblot and the phage display approach suggest that 15 antibodies bound the C-domain, 11 bound the R-domain, 4 bound the T-domain, and for one antibody no domain was assigned. For 3 antibodies, only the complete B fragment was identified using both approaches. Affinity determination. Six anti-DT antibodies in the scFv-Fc and IgG format were further characterized by Microscale Thermophoresis (MST) measurements to determine their EC50 value in solution. Here, we focused on the antibodies ewe191-A7 and ewe191-C12 as well as ewe192-B5(P) as the best neutralizing antibodies derived from MTP panning. Furthermore, all three antibodies derived from panning in solution (ewe372-F6, ewe375-D4 and ewe375-H4) that were later tested in guinea pig in vivo protection assays were included in this analysis. The results are given in Table 5 and Supplementary Figure 3 . The EC50 values of the antibodies in IgG format were quite similar, ranging from 9.4 nM to 13.6 nM. In the scFv-Fc format, the measured EC50 values were more diverse. For half of the antibodies the EC50 value decreased to 3-7 nM, and for the other half it increased to 20-40 nM. The observed difference in the formats might be due to the altered flexibility of the antibody arms having an influence on the avidity of the antibody. This avidity behavior was also visible in the MST measurement in the form of a secondary binding event for ewe191-A7, ewe191-C12, ewe372-F6 and ewe375-H4 in both formats. In vitro neutralization using higher toxin concentrations and the effect of using antibody combinations. The antibodies ewe375-D4, ewe375-H4 and ewe372-F6 selected for in vivo protection experiments were further analyzed in the Vero cell TNT assays 47 using higher toxin concentrations. These in vitro assays were performed at a range of (increasing) DT dose levels referred to as Lcd/1000, Lcd/100 and Lcd/10. The amount of toxin needed to cause more than 50% cell death in the presence of a fixed, defined amount of reference DAT is given as the limit of cytopathic dose (Lcd). The Lcd number refers to the inverse of the antitoxin concentration in IU. Hence, Lcd/1 is the amount of toxin per mL causing >50% cell death in the presence of 1 IU DAT, Lcd/10 for 0.1 IU DAT, and so forth. In our assay, Lcd/1000 equates to approximately 40 × MCD. In addition, neutralization using 4 × MCD was measured in parallel again for direct comparison. The sensitivity of cells to DT is given as multiple of the minimum cytopathic dose (MCD) -so the assay performed at 4 × MCD uses a fixed DT concentration that is 4 × higher than the minimum concentration causing >50% cell death. The results for individual antibodies and antibody combinations are given in Table 6 . The results for the neutralization assay using 4 × MCD are, as expected, in the same range as the results given in Table 2 . There was no loss of potency when using Lcd/1000 (~40 × MCD), but the individual antibodies lost neutralization capacity at higher DT dose levels of Lcd/100 or Lcd/10. However, strong neutralizing activity was observed when antibodies were used in a combination of two or three, giving a specific activity ranging from 80-160 IU/mg ( Table 6 ). The in vivo neutralization efficacy of the antibodies was analyzed in a non-lethal intradermal challenge assay in guinea pigs using a DT dose of Lr/100 51, 52 . Lr/100 is defined as the smallest amount of DT that causes a weak but detectable erythema in the presence of 0.01 IU of reference DAT antitoxin. The Lcd/100 level of DT in the in vitro TNT Vero cell assay is analogous to Lr/100 in the in vivo intradermal challenge assay, showing that the in vitro assay may be a suitable replacement for the in vivo test. The results are given in Table 7 . The individual antibodies did not show a high level of neutralization, whereas all antibody pairs and the triple antibody combination resulted in a neutralization potency of 79 IU/mg. We describe here the development of recombinant human monoclonal antibodies that neutralize DT and have the potential to be developed further as a therapeutic alternative to equine DAT. The use of recombinant antibodies is the prevailing approach for the development of therapeutic antibodies [53] [54] [55] . The advantages include a sequence defined human antibody produced under controlled and reproducible conditions in mammalian cell culture as Table 3 . Overview of the V-gene distribution for all 61 neutralizing antibodies selected for further analysis. The V-gene analysis was performed using VBASE2 (www.vbase2.org) 80 . This data was generated in a PhD thesis 84 . www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ opposed to an animal derived blood product with batch-to-batch variation and the risk of adverse reaction in the form of serum sickness. Human recombinant antibodies were selected from two different immune libraries derived from immunized donors. The first library was constructed from all PBMCs while the second was derived only from CD138 + plasma cells. Two panning approaches were performed using both libraries. Panning on immobilized antigen and panning in solution were both performed because the output using both strategies may differ due to different ways an antigen is presented, and to mitigate the risk of denaturation by MTP immobilization 56 . In order to improve the throughput, for the clones enriched by panning in solution, a functional screening on DT neutralization was performed to directly identify neutralizing antibodies, instead of identification of binding followed by neutralization. The observed V-gene distribution of the DT neutralizing antibodies matched the distribution www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ of V-genes from naive antibody gene libraries 57 with the exception VH4-34. This V-gene is rarely selected from phage display libraries (based on our in-house data from >3500 phage display selected and validated scFv) but is common in the natural human antibody repertoire 58 . This V-gene is also described as self-reactive to both carbohydrate structures of human erythrocytes and commensal bacteria 59 . Interestingly, both of the best neutralizing antibodies directed to the R-domain (see below) have the VH4-34 V-gene. The binding of the neutralizing antibodies to DT and the mutant CRM197 48, 49 was analyzed and reduced binding to CRM197 was seen for many of the selected antibodies. This result is in accordance with Bigio et al. 60 who found, that the conformation of CRM197, which has only one amino acid change in the catalytic center, is not identical to wildtype DT. The antibodies were initially analyzed in the scFv-Fc format because the conversion from scFv to scFv-Fc is only one cloning step 61 . For further in vitro and in vivo assays, 35 selected antibodies were converted to the IgG format because IgGs are the preferred format for therapeutic antibodies 54 . Here, differences in the EC50 between the scFv-Fc format and IgG were measured. A few antibodies lost affinity by cloning from scFv to IgG format, possibly due to different folding or the reduced flexibility of the angle between VH and VL in the Fab/IgG compared to the scFv format because of the stabilization by CH1+ CL 37, 62, 63 . Conversely, the affinity was improved for the antibody ewe192-D8 whose initially weak EC50 increased by around 10-fold following conversion to IgG. The EC50 values determined by MST differed to that measured in ELISA by a factor of ~100. In ELISA the analyzed antibodies had an EC50 value of under 1 nM. The interaction in ELISA is measured on immobilized DT and not in solution which likely explains the vast difference to the MST results. The recognized domains and minimal epitope regions of the neutralizing antibodies were determined by immunoblot or phage display. Epitope mapping by phage display 64-66 is a good supplement to peptide arrays like PepSpots 67,68 or microarrays 69 . While peptide arrays identify linear epitopes very precisely, conformational or non-continuous MERs can be identified by phage display. Using both approaches, the binding domain was identified for 33 antibodies, but it was not possible to identify the epitope domain for one of the antibodies. It was possible to narrow down the minimal epitope region (MER) to 14 amino acids in the best case. For two of the analyzed antibodies, the complete C-domain was selected by phage display, indicating that the epitope is not linear. Interestingly, these two antibodies bound the C-domain in western blot after SDS-PAGE, indicating sufficient refolding of the C-domain on the PVDF membrane. In the case of ewe192-H8, domain mapping revealed that only the B-fragment was the antibody target and not a specific domain within that fragment of DT. However, using the phage display approach the T-domain of the B-fragment was identified showing that the conformation of the recognized MER may depend on the formation of T-and R-domains. It was demonstrated that all three DT domains are targets of highly neutralizing recombinant antibodies which is in accordance with previous publications showing that neutralizing human recombinant antibodies 70, 71 or murine monoclonal antibodies 72 can target all three domains. The neutralization efficacy of the scFv-Fcs and IgGs were first analyzed in vitro using the Vero cell toxin neutralization assay. Approximately a third of the IgGs showed an improved in vitro efficacy (MED50%) compared to the corresponding scFv-Fc. To our knowledge, this is the first direct comparison of scFv-Fc and IgG in in vitro neutralization assays. Other publications have only compared monovalent scFv with the corresponding bivalent IgG, e.g. for neutralization of varicella-zoster virus 73 . The anti R-domain antibodies, ewe372-H1-W and ewe375-D4 had an estimated relative potency of 454 IU/mg and 446 IU/mg, respectively, at 4 × MCD. The human recombinant antibodies developed elsewhere (315C4 70 and DTD4 71 ) were reported to have a lower potency (136 IU/mg and 52 IU/mg, respectively). The in vitro neutralization assay using 315C4 of Sevigny et al. 70 was also performed at a relatively low toxin dose level of ~4 × MCD (based on the end point quoted for the reference antitoxin), and the DT neutralization efficacy for DTD4 by Kakita et al. 71 cannot be calculated in IU/mg from the data given in the publication. The specific activity of the best neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies from our studies in the Vero cell TNT also exceeded (approximately 10-fold) the potency of a rat monoclonal antibody that was included in our study. To our knowledge, ewe372-H1-W and ewe375-D4 are the antibodies with the highest published in vitro DT neutralization potency. For the in vivo neutralization experiments, a non-lethal intradermal challenge experiment 51, 52 was performed based on the method described in the European Pharmacopoeia. This assay is performed at a higher toxin dose www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ (referred to as Lr/100) than that used in the routine Vero cell TNT. Surprisingly, we found that individual antibodies did not neutralize DT even when the antibody dose was increased. In this assay, the specific activity was at least 500-fold lower compared to that measured in the Vero cell TNT at 4 × MCD. These findings were confirmed by performing the Vero cell TNT at higher toxin dose levels. An equine polyclonal DAT included as a comparator in all Vero cell TNT assays had a similar neutralizing potency at all toxin dose levels used. When the monoclonal antibodies were tested in combination -either as a pair or a trio -excellent neutralization of DT was observed in vivo (at Lr/100) and in vitro (at Lcd/100 and Lcd/10). The specific activity of the antibody combinations was www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ determined to be approximately 80 IU/mg in vivo and 80-160 IU/mg in vitro. At the low toxin dose level of 4 × MCD in Vero cells, we did not observe any synergistic effect of combining more than one antibody. We hypothesize that the mode of action is not only based on neutralization, but also on the formation of aggregates as described by Heidelberger and Kendall 74 . This mode of action was also described for other recombinant antibodies which bind more than one epitope on the targeted toxin, e.g. for the anti-TcdA antibody Actotoxumab binding to a repeating epitope structure on the toxin 75 or bispecific VHH antibody constructs against the plant toxin ricin 76, 77 . For the antibody 315C4 an in vivo neutralization potency using a lethal guinea pig challenge Table 4 . www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ assay of 64 IU/mg was published 70 . Further in vivo tests were performed for the antibody S315 which is derived from 315C4, resulting in a neutralization potency which corresponds to 58.8 IU/mg 78 . An in vivo neutralization potency of 73.6 IU/mg were published by Kakita et al. 71 for DTD4 using a rabbit skin test as in vivo model. Despite differences in the models used, our results suggest that the neutralizing potency of the antibody combinations tested in our study is comparable and likely superior to the results obtained for single monoclonal antibodies developed elsewhere. The use of antibody combinations for the development of a therapeutic product is more challenging from a regulatory aspect, but may have clear advantages as a therapeutic because it mimics a polyclonal serum by binding to different epitopes. Further, the use of an antibody combination binding more than one domain on the target toxin may be a more robust therapeutic approach and may provide protection against toxin escape mutants. The antibodies described here are promising candidates for future regulatory and clinical development as an alternative to equine DAT for diphtheria therapy. For the generation of a human immune library against DT, blood from three donors who have been regularly boost-vaccinated was collected 7 days after they received a boost vaccination of a combined diphtheria and tetanus vaccine. This was performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. All the voluntary donors were informed about the project and gave their consent. The use of blood samples for the amplification of antibody gene fragments to develop antibody phage display libraries was approved by the ethical committee of the Technische Universität Braunschweig (Ethik-Kommission der Fakultät 2 der TU Braunschweig, approval number DM-2014-08). The donors have given their consent for study publication. The library construction was performed as described previously with minor modifications 79 . In brief, the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were extracted from the blood via Ficoll (GE Healthcare, Freiburg, Germany) and RNA isolated with Trizol and a Trizol RNA purification kit (Zymo Research, Freiburg, Germany). For the B-cell sorted library, B-cells were stained with mouse α-CD138 (FITC conjugated) antibody (ab27390, abcam, Cambridge, UK) and sorted via FACS and taken up in Trizol. In addition, the RNA of the sorted B cells was extracted using the Trizol RNA purification kit according to the manufacturer's instructions. The RNA was converted into cDNA using Superscript III (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, USA) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The cDNA was amplified with specific primers for the VH chain, primers for kappa light chain and primer for lambda light chain. These PCR products were again amplified with primers adding a restriction site for further cloning into the E. coli expression vector pHAL51. The vector pHAL51 is derived from the vector pHAL30 57 with an AscI stuffer in the VL cloning site. Firstly, the light chain was cloned with the restriction sites MluI and NotI, and secondly the VH chain was cloned with the restriction sites HindIII and NcoI. The efficiency of library cloning was tested with a colony PCR and the rate of complete scFv were determined. The libraries were further packaged with Hyperphage 45,46 followed by addition of glycerine (20% (v/v)) and storage at −80 °C. Antibody selection in microtiter plate. The antibody selection was performed as described previously with modifications 33 . In brief, for the panning procedure, the antigen was immobilized on a Costar Highbinding 96 well plate (Corning, New York, USA). 1 µg of DT (List Biological Laboratories, Campbell, USA) was diluted in PBS (137 mM NaCl; 1.76 mM KH 2 PO 4 × 2 H 2 O) and coated in the wells at 4 °C overnight. Next, the wells were blocked with 350 µL 2% MBPST (2% (w/v) milk powder in PBS; 0.05% Tween20) for 1 h at RT and then washed 3 times with PBST (PBS; 0.05% Tween20). Before adding the libraries to the coated wells, the libraries (5 × 10 10 phage particles) were preincubated with 2% MPBST on blocked wells for 1 h at RT. The libraries were transferred to the coated wells, incubated for 2 h at RT and washed 10 times. Bound phage was eluted with trypsin (10 µg/ mL) at 37 °C and 5 µL of eluate was used for titration. The remaining 145 µL was transferred to a 96 deep well plate (Greiner Bio-One, Frickenhausen, Germany) and incubated with 145 µL E. coli TG1 (OD 600 = 0.5) firstly for 30 min at 37 °C, then 30 min at 37 °C and 650 rpm to infect the phage particles. 1 mL 2xYT-GA (1.6% (w/v) Tryptone; 1% (w/v) Yeast extract; 0.5% (w/v) NaCl (pH 7.0), 100 mM D-Glucose, 100 µg/mL ampicillin) was added and incubated for 1 h at 37 °C and 650 rpm, followed by addition of 1 × 10 10 cfu M13KO7 helper phage. Subsequently, the infected bacteria were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C followed by 30 min at 37 °C and 650 rpm before centrifugation for 10 min at 3220 × g. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet resuspended in fresh 2xYT-AK (1.6% (w/v) Tryptone; 1% (w/v) Yeast extract; 0.5% (w/v) NaCl (pH 7.0), 100 µg/mL ampicillin, 50 µg/ mL kanamycin). The phage antibodies were amplified overnight at 30 °C and 650 rpm and used for the next panning round. In total three panning rounds were performed. In each round, the stringency of the washing Table 7 . In vivo neutralization (at Lr/100 toxin dose level) for individual antibodies and antibody combinations in the guinea pig intradermal challenge assay. The neutralization potency is reported as IU/mg. www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ procedures was increased (20x in panning round 2 and 30x in panning round 3). After the third panning round, the titer plate was used to select monoclonal antibody clones for the screening ELISA. were produced in 96-well MTPs with polypropylene (U96 PP, Greiner Bio-One). Briefly, 150 μL 2xYT-GA was inoculated with the bacteria bearing scFv expressing phagemids. MTPs were incubated overnight at 37 °C and 850 rpm in a MTP shaker (Thermoshaker PST-60HL-4, Lab4You, Berlin, Germany). A volume of 140 μL 2xYT-GA in a PP-MTP well was inoculated with 10 μL of the overnight culture and grown at 37 °C and 850 rpm until bacteria reached an OD 600 of 0.5. Bacteria were harvested by centrifugation for 10 min at 3,220 × g and the supernatant was discarded. To induce expression of the antibody genes, the pellets were resuspended in 150 μL 2xYT supplemented with 100 μg/mL ampicillin and 50 μM isopropyl-beta D thiogalacto pyranoside (IPTG) and incubated at 30 °C and 850 rpm overnight. Bacteria were pelleted by centrifugation for 10 min at 3,220 × g and 4 °C. The scFv-containing supernatant was transferred to a new PP-MTP and stored at 4 °C before ELISA analysis. For the ELISA, 100 ng of DT was coated on 96 well microtitre plates (MaxiSorp, Thermo Fisher Scientific) in PBS (pH 7.4) overnight at 4 °C. After coating, the wells were washed three times with PBST and blocked with 2% MPBST for 1 h at RT, followed by three washing steps with PBST. Supernatants containing monoclonal scFv were mixed with 2% MPBST (1:2) and incubated in the antigen coated plates for 1.5 h at RT followed by three PBST washing cycles. Bound scFv were detected using murine mAb 9E10 which recognizes the C-terminal c-myc tag (1:50 diluted in 2% MPBST) and a goat anti-mouse serum conjugated with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) (A0168, Sigma) (1:50,000 dilution in 2% MPBST). Bound antibodies were visualized with tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) substrate (20 parts TMB solution A (30 mM Potassium citrate; 1% (w/v) Citric acid (pH 4.1)) and 1 part TMB solution B (10 mM TMB; 10% (v/v) Acetone; 90% (v/v) Ethanol; 80 mM H 2 O 2 (30%)) were mixed). After stopping the reaction by addition of 1 N H 2 SO 4 , absorbance at 450 nm with a 620 nm reference was measured in an ELISA plate reader (Epoch, BioTek, Bad Friedrichshall, Germany). Monoclonal binders were sequenced and analyzed using VBASE2 (www.vbase2.org) 80 . For the panning in solution, the antigen was biotinylated with a biotin labelling reagent (EZ Link Sulfo-NHS-LC-Biotin, Thermo Fisher Scientific). 100 ng of the biotinylated antigen was preincubated in a 1.5 mL low protein binding tube (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany) with 2% BSA-PBS on an overhead shaker. After 2 h, 10 µL magnetic streptavidin beads (Dynabeads M-280, Thermo Fisher Scientific) were added to the tube and incubated for an additional 30 min. The tubes were placed for 5 min on a magnetic rack and the supernatant was discarded. The streptavidin beads were washed 10 times with 0.8 mL PBST. Bound phage was eluted with trypsin (10 µg/mL) at 37 °C and 5 µL was used for titration. The remaining 145 µL was transferred to a 96-well deep well plate and incubated with 145 µL E. coli TG1 (OD 600 = 0.5) firstly for 30 min at 37 °C, then for 30 min at 37 °C and 650 rpm to infect the phage particles. 1 mL 2xYT-GA was added and incubated for 1 h at 37 °C at 650 rpm followed by addition of 1 × 10 10 M13KO7 helper phage. Again, the infected bacteria were incubated for 30 min at 37 °C and 30 min at 37 °C and 650 rpm before a centrifugation for 10 min at 3220 × g. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet resuspended in fresh 2xYT-AK. The phage antibodies were amplified at 30 °C overnight and 650 rpm and the produced phage particles were used for the next panning round. In total three panning rounds were performed. In each round, the stringency of the washing procedures was increased (20x in panning round 2 and 30x in panning round 3). The output of the third panning rounds was used for batch cloning into the scFv-Fc format and functional screening. scFv-Fc and IgG antibody cloning, expression and purification. Unique scFv sequences isolated by antibody-phage display in MTPs or the complete output of the third panning rounds (all scFv encoding DNA fragments) were subcloned into pCSE2.7-hIgG1-Fc-XP using NcoI/NotI (New England Biolabs, Frankfurt, Germany) for mammalian production as scFv-Fc, an IgG-like antibody format. The vector pCSE2.7-hIgG1-Fc-XP is derived from the vector pCSE2.6-hIG1-Fc-XP 61 with an additional AscI restriction site in the cloning site for improved NcoI/NotI cloning. The best neutralizing antibodies were converted into the human IgG1 format by subcloning of VH in the vector pCSEH1c (heavy chain) and VL in the vector pCSL3l/pCSL3k (light chain lambda/kappa) 37 . EXPI293F (Thermo Fisher Scientific) cells were transfected with both vectors in parallel. For production, the transfected EXPI293F cells were cultured in chemically defined medium F17 (Thermo Fisher Scientific) supplemented with 0.1% pluronic F68 (PAN-Biotech, Aidenbach, Germany) and 7.5 mM L-glutamine (Merck). A subsequent protein A purification was performed as described previously 61 . Antibody titration eLiSA. The titration ELISA was performed similar to the indirect antigen ELISA (see above). A dilution series was made in blocking solution starting with 1 µg antibody. Afterwards, 100 µL of each dilution was added per well and incubated for 1 h at RT. The plate was washed 3 times with PBST. Goat α-human IgG (Fc-specific, A0170, Sigma) conjugated to horse radish peroxidase (HRP, 1:70,000) was used as the secondary detection antibody and was incubated for 1 h at RT. Unbound antibodies were removed by additional washing steps. Bound antibodies were visualized with TMB substrate (20 parts TMB solution A and 1 part TMB solution B). After stopping the reaction by adding 100 µL 1 N H 2 SO 4 , absorbance at 450 nm with a 620 nm reference was measured in an ELISA plate reader. pipe cloning. Polymerase incomplete primer extension (PIPE) cloning was used to introduce a site directed mutagenesis followed by cloning into the pCSE2.7-hIgG1-XP vector. PCR was performed in 10 µL reactions using 0.5 ng of template, 0.25 µM forward and reverse primers, Q5 reaction buffer and 1 U HotStart Q5 DNA polymerase (NEB). The cycling conditions were: 98 °C 30 sec, 30 × (98 °C 10 s, 72 °C 2:30 min for products >1.5 kb or 1 min for < 1.5 kb). The correct size of the PCR products was checked with a 1% (w/v) agarose gel in TAE buffer containing 1 µg ethidium bromide. 2.5 µL vector product and 2.5 µL insert product were digested for 1 h at 37 °C with 10 U of DpnI NEB and the total amount was used to transform 20 µL of XL1 Blue MRF' supercompetent cells (Agilent Technologies, Waldbronn, Germany) via heat shock transformation according to manufacturer's instructions. encoding the A or B fragment of DT or the single domains, were amplified from Corynebacterium diphtheria (DSM 43989, DSMZ) and cloned into pET21a(+) (Merck). Production of the recombinant proteins with a C-terminally 6 × His-tagged proteins in the E. coli BLR(DE3) expression system was performed in LB-A-IPTG (1% (w/v) tryptone; 0.5% (w/v) yeast extract; 1% (w/v) NaCl (pH 7.0), 100 µg/mL ampicillin, 0.5 mM IPTG) over 3 h at 37 °C. Recombinant proteins containing a HIS-tag were purified using immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (IMAC). The bacterial culture was centrifuged at 10,000 × g for 15 min at 4 °C. The pellet was then resuspended in binding buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl, 5 mM imidazole, and, if the protein was not soluble, 6 M urea was added) and sonicated 3 times for 2 min with pulsed cycles. Afterwards, the suspension was centrifuged at 16,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C and the supernatant was loaded to a support column containing Sepharose (activated with 0.1 M NiSO 4 ). The column was washed with washing buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl, 60 mM imidazole, for some domains 6 M urea was added) until a OD 280 of approximately 0 for the flow-through was reached. The bound antibodies were then eluted with elution buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 0.5 M NaCl, 1 M imidazole, for some domains 6 M urea was added). The buffer was exchanged to PBS by dialysis and the purified proteins were stored for a short time at 4 °C or aliquoted and stored at −20 °C long term. For in vitro DT Toxin neutralization assay (TNT), a Vero cell line (African green monkey kidney cells) was used. Vero cells were cultivated in EMEM medium (Biochrom) supplemented with 0.015 M HEPES (Carl Roth), 0.1% Glucose (Carl Roth), 100 µg/mL penicillin/streptomycin (Biochrom), 2 mM l-glutamine (Biochrom) and 5% fetal calf serum (Biochrom) at 37 °C and 5% (v/v) CO2, and passaged 2-3 times per week when confluency exceeded 90%. For routine screening, the Vero cell assay was performed using a DT dose referred to as 4 × MCD. This is a fixed dose of DT at 4 × the minimum concentration causing more than 50% cytopathic effect in Vero cells. This is the most sensitive version of the assay allowing very low concentrations of antibodies to be screened for neutralization. For further analysis of IgG antibodies, assays were performed at higher toxin dose levels referred to as Lcd/1000, Lcd/100 or Lcd/10 81 . These DT dose levels are defined as the minimum concentration of DT required to produce a cytopathic effect in Vero cells after 6 days in culture when DT is mixed with a fixed concentration of a reference antitoxin at 0.1, 0.01 or 0.001 IU/ml for Lcd/10, Lcd/100 or Lcd/1000, respectively. The DT dose levels were pre-determined by titration of DT against the reference antitoxin (WHO International Standard for Diphtheria Antitoxin Equine, NIBSC code 17/230). For the neutralization assays, serial, two-fold dilutions of antibody samples either individually (ranging from 300 µg to 0.1 pg) or in combination were made in complete EMEM in 96-well tissue culture plates, prior to addition of an equal volume (50 µL) of diphtheria toxin (TU Braunschweig: List Biological Laboratories; NIBSC: EDQM Biological Reference Preparation, batch 1) at a fixed concentration (dependent on the DT dose level of the assay). Samples were left for 1 h at room temperature to allow DT neutralization to occur followed by addition of 50 µL of a suspension of Vero cells to give a cell density of 2 × 10 4 cells per well. Control wells were included on every plate containing DT only (toxin control) or cells only (cell control). The reference DAT antitoxin was included on every plate. Plates were incubated for 6 days at + 37 °C in humidified air supplemented with 5% CO 2 . Cell viability was then determined by incubating cells with Thiazolyl Blue Tetrazolium Bromide (MTT, Sigma). Cells were incubated with MTT (5 mg/ml in PBS) for 4 h at + 37 °C in humidified air containing 5% CO 2 . Supernatants were carefully removed and the MTT-formazan product in viable cells was extracted using 10% w/v SDS in 50% v/v dimethylformamide, pH 4.7 (100 µL/well). The plates were returned to the incubator overnight to allow for complete extraction and stabilization of the coloured product and the absorbance was read at 570 nm. End points were defined as the lowest dilution at which neutralization of DT was sufficient to produce >50% viable Vero cells (where the 50% cut-off was based on the half-maximum OD for eight control wells containing Vero cells only and eight wells using the specific, constant DT concentration). Domain mapping by immuno blot. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was used to separate the DT-fragments according to their electrophoretic mobility. The DT-fragments were mixed with 5 × Laemmli's sample buffer and were boiled for 10 min at 95 °C. A protein standard and the samples were then loaded onto the gel. Electrophoresis was performed at 200 V and 400 mA per gel for 45 min followed by western blot analysis. A semi-dry western blot was performed to transfer DT-fragments from SDS gels onto polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) membranes (Bio-Rad, Feldkirchen, Germany) at 20 V for 30 min. After western blotting, the membrane was blocked with M-PBST for 60 min at room temperature. Detection of DT-fragments was performed indirectly via developed DT-neutralizing human antibodies followed by Fcγ specific AP-conjugated secondary antibody (109-055-098, Jackson Immuno Research Laboratories, Cambridgeshire, UK) in a 1:20,000 dilution in MPBST. After 1 h incubation at room temperature, the membrane was washed with PBST and AP-substrate buffer (100 mM Tris HCl pH 9.5, 0.5 mM MgCl 2 ) and bound antibodies were visualized with nitro blue tetrazolium chloride (0.30 mg/mL) and 5-Bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl phosphate (0.15 mg/mL) in AP substrate buffer. Finally, the membrane was washed with water and dried. For documentation, the blots were scanned. epitope mapping by phage display. For epitope mapping, single gene libraries were constructed as described previously 64 . In brief, the DT encoding DNA was fragmented by sonication, polished and blunt end cloned into the digested pHORF3 vector 50 www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Middleton, USA) were used. The efficiency of cloning was tested with a colony PCR and the rate of complete fragments were determined. The libraries were further packaged with Hyperphage 45, 46 . The produced phage particles were stored at −80 °C after adding glycerine (20% (v/v)). The panning in solution for epitope mapping was performed as described previously 69 . In brief, 1 µg of an unrelated antibody (negative control) was coated in 100 µL PBS overnight at 4 °C in a cavity of a Costar High Binding microtiter plate. The wells were then blocked with panning block for 1 h at RT and then washed 3x with PBST using a microplate washer. Next, 10 9 cfu of the DT-fragment-phage library was diluted in 150 µL 2% (w/v) BSA in PBST, added to the negative control well, and incubated for 1 h at room temperature. Protein A coupled magnetic beads (SureBeads, BioRad) were prepared according to manufacturer's instructions. Preincubated phage was transferred to a protein low binding (PLB) microtube (Sarstedt) and co-incubated with 15 µL Protein A beads for 1 h on a programmable rotator-mixer (PRM) (PTR-30 Grantbio) to further remove sticky or unspecific phage. The magnetic beads were then removed with a magnetic rack and discarded. 100 ng of the DT neutralizing antibody was added to the remaining phage and incubated for 2 h on a rotator-mixer. 15 µL of freshly prepared magnetic protein A beads were added and incubated for another 30 minutes followed by a separation of the beads on a magnetic rack. The supernatant was discarded and the beads were washed 10x with 1 mL PBST and then eluted with 150 µL trypsin (10 µg/mL) and incubated at 37°C for 30 min. The identification of MERs was performed by ELISA. In brief, for the screening ELISA, 100 ng of antibody was coated on 96 well microtitre plates (MaxiSorp, Thermo Fisher Scientific) in PBS pH 7.4 overnight at 4°C. Following coating, the wells were washed with PBST and blocked with 2% MPBST for 1 h at RT, followed by three washing steps with PBST. Supernatant containing DT-fragment bearing phage were mixed with 2% MPBST (1:4) and incubated in the antibody coated plates for 90-120 min at RT followed by three PBST washing cycles. Bound phage was detected using HRP conjugated mouse anti-M13 antibody (27-9421-01, GE Healthcare) diluted 1:40,000 in 2% MPBST and visualized with TMB substrate (20 parts TMB solution A and 1 part TMB solution B). After stopping the reaction by addition of 1 N H 2 SO 4 , absorbance at 450 nm with a 620 nm reference was measured in an ELISA plate reader (Epoch, BioTek). The phagemids encoding the Bound DT-fragments were sequenced and aligned to the DT sequence to identify the MER. Microscale thermophoresis for affinity determination. DT was labelled in PBS pH 7.4 using the Amine Reactive Monolith Protein Labeling Kit RED-NHS 2nd Generation (NanoTemper, Munich, Germany) following the manufacturer's protocol. In total, 5 nM of labelled DT was premixed in a 384 well non-binding polystyrene plate (Corning) with 12 different concentrations (1:2 dilution) of the respective antibody or scFv-Fc in PBS by Precision XS (BioTek Instruments). For Microscale Thermophoresis (MST) measurements with Monolith NT. Automated (NanoTemper) in Monolith NT. Automated Capillary Chips (NanoTemper), an excitation power of 20% and a high MST power of 60% was applied. The Hill coefficient was determined by MO Affinity Analysis software (NanoTemper) for the IgGs after 10 sec of heating and for the scFv-Fc after 15 sec of heating to gain sufficient amplitude signals. All measurements were performed in triplicate resulting in signal to noise ratios over 15. In vivo efficacy of IgGs by intradermal challenge in guinea pigs. Potency of IgGs by intradermal challenge was performed at NIBSC. In vivo studies are regulated by the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 in accordance with EC Directive 2010/63/EU. Studies were reviewed and approved by the NIBSC Animal Welfare and Ethical Review Body and performed under a Project Licence granted by the UK Home Office. For the neutralization assays, female guinea pigs (Dunkin Hartley strain) weighing between 350-450 g were obtained from B&K Universal (Marshall BioResources UK) Animals (up to 8 per pen) were housed in rectangular or square floor pens with a metal and perspex construction, above minimum size requirements defined by UK legislation. Animals had olfactory and visual stimulation between the pens with autoclaved dust-free wood shavings as bedding ('eco-pure' supplied by Datesand). Husbandry conditions were a 12 h light, 12 h dark cycle, including 'dawn and dusk' half-light periods of 30 minutes each. Temperature was maintained between 16-23 degrees Celsius. A pelleted diet ('FD1' supplied by LBS), filtered mains water (bottle and bowl) and autoclaved hay were all provided ad libitum. Washed fresh greens were provided 3 times weekly. Environmental enrichment including plastic and/ or cardboard boxes, tunnels and shelters, and nesting material were also provided in each pen. Animals were health checked at least once per day as stock, and up to 3 times daily whilst on test by trained and competent technical staff, with attention to the size and degree of erythema at the injection sites and the general condition and behaviour of the animals. The assay was performed according to the method described in the European Pharmacopoeia monograph for Diphtheria Antitoxin 83 . A series of 6 dilutions of antibody sample (either individually or as a combination) were mixed with a fixed volume of DT (EDQM Biological Reference Preparation, batch 1) at a DT dose level of Lr/100. The Lr/100 dose level for this toxin was pre-determined by titration against 0.01 IU/ml of a reference antitoxin (WHO International Standard for Diphtheria Antitoxin Equine, NIBSC code 17/230). A series of 6 dilutions of the reference antitoxin were also prepared and mixed with the same amount of DT in parallel to allow for determination of relative potency. Samples were allowed to stand at RT for 30-40 minutes prior to intradermal injection (0.2 mL) into the shaved flank of a guinea pig. A group of 2 animals was used for each antibody sample (or combination) or the reference antitoxin with 3 dilutions injected per flank. For each sample, the largest volume of antitoxin failing to protect guinea pigs from the local erythematous effect of DT was defined as the end point and potency was determined relative to the end point for the reference antitoxin, after taking into account total dilution factor for the sample. (2020) 10:571 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-57103-5 www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Corynebacterium ulcerans cutaneous diphtheria The pathology of diphtheria Penicillin vs. erythromycin in the treatment of diphtheria A review of the international issues surrounding the availability and demand for diphtheria antitoxin for therapeutic use Epidemiology and Prevention of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases Mutation in the structural gene for diphtheria toxin carried by temperate phage Nucleotide sequence of the structural gene for diphtheria toxin carried by corynebacteriophage beta Precursor in cotranslational secretion of diphtheria toxin Nucleotide sequence and expression of the diphtheria tox228 gene in Escherichia coli Structure-activity relationships in diphtheria toxin Structure and activity of diphtheria toxin. I. Thiol-dependent dissociation of a fraction of toxin into enzymically active and inactive fragments Structure and activity of diphtheria toxin. II. Attack by trypsin at a specific site within the intact toxin molecule The crystal structure of diphtheria toxin Receptor-mediated internalization and degradation of diphtheria toxin by monkey kidney cells Receptor-mediated entry of diphtheria toxin into monkey kidney (Vero) cells: electron microscopic evaluation Low pH-induced release of diphtheria toxin A-fragment in Vero cells. Biochemical evidence for transfer to the cytosol Diphtheria toxin Involvement of both caspase-like proteases and serine proteases in apoptotic cell death induced by ricin, modeccin, diphtheria toxin, and pseudomonas toxin Über das Zustandekommen der Diphtherie-Immunität und der Tetanus-Immunität bei Thieren The Impact of Conflict on Immunisation Coverage in 16 Countries Diphtheria outbreak in Yemen: the impact of conflict on a fragile health system Resurgence of Vaccine-Preventable Diseases in Venezuela as a Regional Public Health Threat in the Real-time analysis of the diphtheria outbreak in forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals in Bangladesh The Treatment of Serum Sickness Occurring in Diphtheria The Antibody Response in the Human Being After Injection with Normal Horse Serum The localization of circulating immune complexes in experimental serum sickness. The role of vasoactive amines and hydrodynamic forces Access to diphtheria antitoxin for therapy and diagnostics How can monoclonal antibodies be harnessed against neglected tropical diseases and other infectious diseases? Recombinant antibodies for diagnostics and therapy against pathogens and toxins generated by phage display Phage display-derived human antibodies in clinical development and therapy Parallelized Antibody Selection in Microtiter Plates Magnetic Nanoparticle-Based Semi-Automated Panning for High-Throughput Antibody Selection Phage display for the generation of antibodies for proteome research, diagnostics and therapy The influence of antibody fragment format on phage display based affinity maturation of IgG Reformatting of scFv antibodies into the scFv-Fc format and their downstream purification Development of Germline-Humanized Antibodies Neutralizing Botulinum Neurotoxin A and B Development of Human-Like scFv-Fc Neutralizing Botulinum Neurotoxin E The European AntibotABE Framework Program and Its Update: Development of Innovative Botulinum Antibodies Isolation of a human-like antibody fragment (scFv) that neutralizes ricin biological activity High-affinity, human antibody-like antibody fragment (single-chain variable fragment) neutralizing the lethal factor (LF) of Bacillus anthracis by inhibiting protective antigen-LF complex formation In vivo neutralization of dendrotoxin-mediated neurotoxicity of black mamba venom by oligoclonal human IgG antibodies On the influence of vector design on antibody phage display A helper phage to improve single-chain antibody presentation in phage display In vitro assays for detection of diphtheria toxin Physicochemical and immunochemical techniques predict the quality of diphtheria toxoid vaccines Immunoprecipitation and partial characterization of diphtheria toxin-binding glycoproteins from surface of guinea pig cells Identification of immunogenic polypeptides from a Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae genome library by phage display National Institute for Biological Standards and Control, Hertfordshire, UK European Directorate for the Quality of Medicines Collaborative study for the validation of serological methods for potency testing of diphtheria toxoid vaccines-part 1 Designing Human Antibodies by Phage Display Current progress in innovative engineered antibodies Recombinant polyclonal antibodies: the next generation of antibody therapeutics? Identification of a putative Crf splice variant and generation of recombinant antibodies for the specific detection of Aspergillus fumigatus Generation and analysis of the improved human HAL9/10 antibody phage display libraries A fully synthetic human Fab antibody library based on fixed VH/VL framework pairings with favorable biophysical properties Self-reactive VH4-34-expressing IgG B cells recognize commensal bacteria Conformational changes in diphtheria toxoids. Analysis with monoclonal antibodies High level transient production of recombinant antibodies and antibody fusion proteins in HEK293 cells Rise and fall of an anti-MUC1 specific antibody Structure-based engineering to restore high affinity binding of an isoform-selective anti-TGFβ1 antibody Epitope Mapping via Phage Display from Single-Gene Libraries Epitope Mapping by Phage Display High throughput functional epitope mapping: revisiting phage display platform to scan target antigen surface Identification of an epitope in the C terminus of normal prion protein whose expression is modulated by binding events in the N terminus Sequence defined antibodies improve the detection of cadherin 2 (N-cadherin) during zebrafish development Development of Neutralizing and Non-neutralizing Antibodies Targeting Known and Novel Epitopes of TcdB of Clostridioides difficile Identification of a human monoclonal antibody to replace equine diphtheria antitoxin for treatment of diphtheria intoxication Isolation of a human monoclonal antibody with strong neutralizing activity against diphtheria toxin Protective monoclonal antibodies to diphtheria toxin Neutralizing human antibodies to varicella-zoster virus (VZV) derived from a VZV patient recombinant antibody library Quantitative studies on the precipitin reaction Epitopes and Mechanism of Action of the Clostridium difficile Toxin A-Neutralizing Antibody Actoxumab A Bispecific Antibody Promotes Aggregation of Ricin Toxin on Cell Surfaces and Alters Dynamics of Toxin Internalization and Trafficking Mechanisms of Ricin Toxin Neutralization Revealed through Engineered Homodimeric and Heterodimeric Camelid Antibodies Potency of a human monoclonal antibody to diphtheria toxin relative to equine diphtheria anti-toxin in a guinea pig intoxication model. Virulence 1-9 Construction of Human Immune and Naive scFv Libraries Analysis of single chain antibody sequences using the VBASE2 Fab analysis tool Suitability of the Vero cell method for titration of diphtheria antitoxin in the United States potency test for diphtheria toxoid Oligopeptide m13 phage display in pathogen research Development of recombinant human anti-diphtheria toxin neutralizing antibodies for diphtheria therapy Refined structure of dimeric diphtheria toxin at 2.0 A resolution We kindly acknowledge the financial support of the PETA International Science Consortium Ltd. for conducting the non-animal research components of this project to replace horse use and the Center for Contemporary Equine Studies. E.V.W. designed and performed experiments, analyzed data and drafted the manuscript. M.B., R.T. and M.S. performed experiments and analyzed data. J.B., S.D. and A.E. participated in the design of the study and analyzed data. D.S. participated in the design of the study and conceived the study. P.S. performed experiments, conceived the study, participated in the design of the study, analyzed data and drafted the manuscript. M.H. conceived the study, participated in the design of the study, analyzed data and drafted the manuscript. All authors reviewed the final manuscript. The authors intend to file a patent on the described anti-diphtheria toxin antibodies. Supplementary information is available for this paper at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-57103-5.Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to M.H.Reprints and permissions information is available at www.nature.com/reprints.Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.