Patent · US Active

Amino acid sequences directed against cellular receptors for viruses and bacteria

US9005963B2 · kind B2 · utility

4Cited by
0References
18Claims
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Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateOct 14, 2009
Grant dateApr 14, 2015
Priority date
Expiry dateFeb 22, 2031

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC Y)Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies
  • CPC primaryY10S530/866
  • WIPO fieldPharmaceuticals
  • WIPO sectorChemistry

Abstract

The present invention relates to amino acid sequences that are directed against (as defined herein) human cellular receptors for viruses and/or bacteria such as e.g. NANOBODIES specifically recognizing hCD4, hCXCR4, hCCR5, hTLR4, human alphaV integrin, human beta3 integrin, human beta1 integrin, human alpha2 integrin, hCD81, hSR-BI, hClaudin-1, hClaudin-6 and hClaudin-9, as well as to compounds or constructs, and in particular proteins and polypeptides, that comprise or essentially consist of one or more such amino acid sequences. The amino acid sequences may be used to prevent human cell entry of HIV, HCV, adenoviruses, hantavirus, herpesvirus, echo-virus 1 and others.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.