https://www.selleckchem.com/products/colcemid.html There is widespread interest in facile methods for generating potent neutralizing antibodies, nanobodies, and other affinity proteins against SARS-CoV-2 and related viruses to address current and future pandemics. While isolating antibodies from animals and humans are proven approaches, these methods are limited to the affinities, specificities, and functional activities of antibodies generated by the immune system. Here we report a surprisingly simple directed evolution method for generating nanobodies with high affinities and neutralization activities against SARS-CoV-2. We demonstrate that complementarity-determining region swapping between low-affinity lead nanobodies, which we discovered unintentionally but find is simple to implement systematically, results in matured nanobodies with unusually large increases in affinity. Importantly, the matured nanobodies potently neutralize both SARS-CoV-2 pseudovirus and live virus, and possess drug-like biophysical properties. We expect that our methods will improve in vitro nanobody discovery and accelerate the generation of potent neutralizing nanobodies against diverse coronaviruses.Amyloid disorders such as Alzheimer's disease (AD) involve the aggregation of secreted proteins. However, it is largely unclear how secretory-pathway proteins contribute to amyloid formation. We developed a systems biology framework integrating expression data with protein-protein interaction networks to estimate a tissue's fitness for producing specific secreted proteins and analyzed the fitness of the secretory pathway of various brain regions and cell types for synthesizing the AD-associated amyloid precursor protein (APP). While key amyloidogenic pathway components were not differentially expressed in AD brains, we found Aβ deposition correlates with systemic down- and upregulation of the secretory-pathway components proximal to APP and amyloidogenic secretases, respectively, in AD. Our