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Filamentous Fusion Phage: Novel Expression Vectors that Display Cloned . . . 26 December 1984; accepted 4 March 1985 Filamento d into filamentous phage gene III to create a fusion protein with the foreign sequence in the middle The fusion protein is incorporated into the viri n, which retains infectivity and displays the foreign amino acids in immunologically accessible form These "fusion phage" can be enriched m
Phage Display: Simple Evolution in a Petri Dish The results summarized in this section were reported in my first phage-display article, in which I called constructs like the test phage “fila-mentous fusion phage” (Smith, 1985)
Phage display - Wikipedia Phage display was first described by George P Smith in 1985, when he demonstrated the display of peptides on filamentous phage (long, thin viruses that infect bacteria) by fusing the virus's capsid protein to one peptide out of a collection of peptide sequences [2] This displayed the different peptides on the outer surfaces of the collection of viral clones, where the screening step of the
Filamentous fusion phage: novel expression vectors that display cloned . . . Gene III of filamentous phage encodes a minor coat protein, pIII, located at one end of the virion (1, 2) The amino-terminal half of pIII binds to the F pilus during infection, while the carboxyl-terminal half is buried in the virion and participates in morphogenesis (3, 4) I report here that a foreign sequence can be inserted between the two domains without unduly disrupting pIII fuction
Phage Display to Detect and Identify Autoantibodies in Disease Smith first described phage-display technology in 1985, spurred on by his finding that filamen-tous phage could be engineered to display foreign amino acid sequences on the tip of phage coat
Filamentous fusion phage: novel expression vectors that display cloned . . . Foreign DNA fragments can be inserted into filamentous phage gene III to create a fusion protein with the foreign sequence in the middle The fusion protein is incorporated into the virion, which retains infectivity and displays the foreign amino acids in immunologically accessible form These "fusion phage" can be enriched more than 1000-fold over ordinary phage by affinity for antibody
George P. Smith - Nobel Lecture slides Steve developed a practical phage display vector (after some false starts like pIG3C) and affinity selection as grad student, 1985-1988