Zhang Q et al. (AUG 2005)
Infection and immunity 73 8 5166--72
Production and characterization of monoclonal antibodies against Enterocytozoon bieneusi purified from rhesus macaques.
Enterocytozoon bieneusi spores derived from rhesus macaque feces were purified by serial salt-Percoll-sucrose-iodixanol centrifugation,resulting in two bands with different specific densities of 95.6% and 99.5% purity and with a recovery efficiency of 10.8%. An ultrastructural examination revealed typical E. bieneusi spores. Twenty-six stable hybridomas were derived from BALB/c mice immunized with spores and were cloned twice by limiting dilution or growth on semisolid medium. Four monoclonal antibodies (MAbs),reacting exclusively with spores,were further characterized. These MAbs specifically reacted with spores present in stools of humans and macaques,as visualized by immunofluorescence,and with spore walls,as visualized by immunoelectron microscopy. A blocking enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blotting revealed that the epitope recognized by 8E2 was different from those recognized by 7G2,7H2,and 12G8,which identified the same 40-kDa protein. These MAbs will be valuable tools for diagnostics,for epidemiological investigations,for host-pathogen interaction studies,and for comparative genomics and proteomics.
View Publication
Yokoyama WM et al. (SEP 2006)
Current protocols in immunology / edited by John E. Coligan ... [et al.] Chapter 2 Unit 2.5
Production of monoclonal antibodies.
This unit describes the production of monoclonal antibodies beginning with immunization and cell fusion and selection. Support protocols are provided for screening primary hybridoma supernatants for antibodies of desired specificity,establishment of stable hybridoma lines,cloning of these B cell lines by limiting dilution to obtain monoclonal lines,and preparation of cloning/expansion medium. An alternate protocol describes cell fusion and one-step selection and cloning of hybridomas utilizing a semi-solid methylcellulose-based medium (ClonaCell-HY).
View Publication
Chua KY et al. (JAN 2008)
Methods in molecular biology (Clifton,N.J.) 423 509--20
Production of monoclonal antibody by DNA immunization with electroporation.
DNA immunization with in vivo electroporation is an efficient alternative protocol for the production of monoclonal antibodies (mAb). Generation of mAb by DNA immunization is a novel approach to circumvent the following technical hurdles associated with problematic antigens: low abundance and protein instability and use of recombinant proteins that lack posttranslational modifications. This chapter describes the use of a DNA-based immunization protocol for the production of mAb against a house dust mite allergen,designated as Blo t 11,which is a paramyosin homologue found in Blomia tropicalis mites. The Blo t 11 cDNA fused at the N terminus to the sequence of a signal peptide was cloned into the pCI mammalian expression vector. The DNA construct was injected intramuscularly with in vivo electroporation into mice,and the specific antibody production in mice was analyzed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Hybridomas were generated by fusing mouse splenocytes with myeloma cells using the ClonaCell-HY Hybridoma Cloning Kit. Six hybridoma clones secreting Blo t 11 mAb were successfully generated,and these mAb are useful reagents for immunoaffinity purification and immunoassays.
View Publication
Strovel ET et al. (JAN 2000)
The Journal of biological chemistry 275 4 2399--403
Protein phosphatase 2Calpha dephosphorylates axin and activates LEF-1-dependent transcription.
The Dishevelled (Dvl) gene family encodes cytoplasmic proteins that are necessary for Wnt signal transduction. Utilizing the yeast two-hybrid system,we identified protein phosphatase 2Calpha (PP2C) as a Dvl-PDZ domain-interacting protein. PP2C exists in a complex with Dvl,beta-catenin,and Axin,a negative regulator of Wnt signaling. In a Wnt-responsive LEF-1 reporter gene assay,expression of PP2C activates transcription and also elicits a synergistic response with beta-catenin and Wnt-1. In addition,PP2C expression relieves Axin-mediated repression of LEF-1-dependent transcription. PP2C utilizes Axin as a substrate both in vitro and in vivo and decreases its half-life. These results indicate that PP2C is a positive regulator of Wnt signal transduction and mediates its effects through the dephosphorylation of Axin.
View Publication
Katori S et al. (JUL 2009)
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 29 29 9137--47
Protocadherin-alpha family is required for serotonergic projections to appropriately innervate target brain areas.
Serotonergic axons from the raphe nuclei in the brainstem project to every region of the brain,where they make connections through their extensive terminal arborizations. This serotonergic innervation contributes to various normal behaviors and psychiatric disorders. The protocadherin-alpha (Pcdha) family of clustered protocadherins consists of 14 cadherin-related molecules generated from a single gene cluster. We found that the Pcdhas were strongly expressed in the serotonergic neurons. To elucidate their roles,we examined serotonergic fibers in a mouse mutant (Pcdha(Delta CR/Delta CR)) lacking the Pcdha cytoplasmic region-encoding exons,which are common to the gene cluster. In the first week after birth,the distribution pattern of serotonergic fibers in Pcdha(Delta CR/Delta CR) mice was similar to wild-type,but by 3 weeks of age,when the serotonergic axonal termini complete their arborizations,the distribution of the projections was abnormal. In some target regions,notably the globus pallidus and substantia nigra,the normally even distribution of serotonin axonal terminals was,in the mutants,dense at the periphery of each region,but sparse in the center. In the stratum lacunosum-molecular of the hippocampus,the mutants showed denser serotonergic innervation than in wild-type,and in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus and the caudate-putamen,the innervation was sparser. Together,the abnormalities suggested that Pcdha proteins are important in the late-stage maturation of serotonergic projections. Further examination of alternatively spliced exons encoding the cytoplasmic tail showed that the A-type (but not the B-type) cytoplasmic tail was essential for the normal development of serotonergic projections.
View Publication
Matsumoto SC et al. (JAN 2006)
The FASEB Journal 20 3 550--2
Retinal dysfunction in patients with chronic Chagas' disease is associated to anti-Trypanosoma cruzi antibodies that cross-react with rhodopsin
To investigate retinal involvement in chronic Chagas' disease,we performed electroretinography and retinal fluorescein angiography studies in chagasic patients. Our results demonstrated a dissociated electrophysiological response characterized by both an abnormal reduction of the electroretinographic b-wave amplitude and a delayed latency,under the dark-adaptated condition. These alterations are compatible with a selective dysfunction of the rods. Antibodies raised against Trypanosoma cruzi that also interact with beta1-adrenergic receptor blocked light stimulation of cGMP-phosphodiesterase in bovine rod membranes. The specificity from the antibody-rhodopsin interaction was confirmed by Western blot analysis and antigenic competition experiments. Our results suggest an immunomediated rhodopsin blockade. T. cruzi infection probably induces an autoimmune response against rhodopsin in the chronic phase of Chagas' disease through a molecular mimicry mechanism similar to that described previously on cardiac human beta1-adrenergic and M2-cholinergic receptors,all related to the same subfamily of G-protein-coupled receptors.
View Publication
Fukuma A et al. (APR 2016)
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases 10 4 e0004595
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus antigen detection using monoclonal antibodies to the nucleocapsid protein
BACKGROUND Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is a tick-borne infectious disease with a high case fatality rate,and is caused by the SFTS virus (SFTSV). SFTS is endemic to China,South Korea,and Japan. The viral RNA level in sera of patients with SFTS is known to be strongly associated with outcomes. Virological SFTS diagnosis with high sensitivity and specificity are required in disease endemic areas. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS We generated novel monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against the SFTSV nucleocapsid (N) protein and developed a sandwich antigen (Ag)-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of N protein of SFTSV using MAb and polyclonal antibody as capture and detection antibodies,respectively. The Ag-capture system was capable of detecting at least 350-1220 TCID50/100 μl/well from the culture supernatants of various SFTSV strains. The efficacy of the Ag-capture ELISA in SFTS diagnosis was evaluated using serum samples collected from patients suspected of having SFTS in Japan. All 24 serum samples (100%) containing high copy numbers of viral RNA (textgreater105 copies/ml) showed a positive reaction in the Ag-capture ELISA,whereas 12 out of 15 serum samples (80%) containing low copy numbers of viral RNA (textless105 copies/ml) showed a negative reaction in the Ag-capture ELISA. Among these Ag-capture ELISA-negative 12 samples,9 (75%) were positive for IgG antibodies against SFTSV. CONCLUSIONS The newly developed Ag-capture ELISA is useful for SFTS diagnosis in acute phase patients with high levels of viremia.
View Publication
Mousa JJ et al. (OCT 2016)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Oct 17 201609449
Structural basis for nonneutralizing antibody competition at antigenic site II of the respiratory syncytial virus fusion protein.
Palivizumab was the first antiviral monoclonal antibody (mAb) approved for therapeutic use in humans,and remains a prophylactic treatment for infants at risk for severe disease because of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV). Palivizumab is an engineered humanized version of a murine mAb targeting antigenic site II of the RSV fusion (F) protein,a key target in vaccine development. There are limited reported naturally occurring human mAbs to site II; therefore,the structural basis for human antibody recognition of this major antigenic site is poorly understood. Here,we describe a nonneutralizing class of site II-specific mAbs that competed for binding with palivizumab to postfusion RSV F protein. We also describe two classes of site II-specific neutralizing mAbs,one of which escaped competition with nonneutralizing mAbs. An X-ray crystal structure of the neutralizing mAb 14N4 in complex with F protein showed that the binding angle at which human neutralizing mAbs interact with antigenic site II determines whether or not nonneutralizing antibodies compete with their binding. Fine-mapping studies determined that nonneutralizing mAbs that interfere with binding of neutralizing mAbs recognize site II with a pose that facilitates binding to an epitope containing F surface residues on a neighboring protomer. Neutralizing antibodies,like motavizumab and a new mAb designated 3J20 that escape interference by the inhibiting mAbs,avoid such contact by binding at an angle that is shifted away from the nonneutralizing site. Furthermore,binding to rationally and computationally designed site II helix-loop-helix epitope-scaffold vaccines distinguished neutralizing from nonneutralizing site II antibodies.
View Publication
Loveless BC et al. (JUN 2011)
The Journal of Biological Chemistry 286 23 20658--65
Structural characterization and epitope mapping of the glutamic acid/alanine-rich protein from Trypanosoma congolense: defining assembly on the parasite cell surface.
Trypanosoma congolense is an African trypanosome that causes serious disease in cattle in Sub-Saharan Africa. The four major life cycle stages of T. congolense can be grown in vitro,which has led to the identification of several cell-surface molecules expressed on the parasite during its transit through the tsetse vector. One of these,glutamic acid/alanine-rich protein (GARP),is the first expressed on procyclic forms in the tsetse midgut and is of particular interest because it replaces the major surface coat molecule of bloodstream forms,the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) that protects the parasite membrane,and is involved in antigenic variation. Unlike VSG,however,the function of GARP is not known,which necessarily limits our understanding of parasite survival in the tsetse. Toward establishing the function of GARP,we report its three-dimensional structure solved by iodide phasing to a resolution of 1.65 Å. An extended helical bundle structure displays an unexpected and significant degree of homology to the core structure of VSG,the only other major surface molecule of trypanosomes to be structurally characterized. Immunofluorescence microscopy and immunoaffinity-tandem mass spectrometry were used in conjunction with monoclonal antibodies to map both non-surface-disposed and surface epitopes. Collectively,these studies enabled us to derive a model describing the orientation and assembly of GARP on the surface of trypanosomes. The data presented here suggest the possible structure-function relationships involved in replacement of the bloodstream form VSG by GARP as trypanosomes differentiate in the tsetse vector after a blood meal.
View Publication
Chang Q et al. (SEP 2002)
Infection and Immunity 70 9 4977--86
Structure-function relationships for human antibodies to pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide from transgenic mice with human immunoglobulin Loci.
To investigate the influence of antibody structure and specificity on antibody efficacy against Streptococcus pneumoniae,human monospecific antibodies (MAbs) to serotype 3 pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide (PPS-3) were generated from transgenic mice reconstituted with human immunoglobulin loci (XenoMouse mice) vaccinated with a PPS-3-tetanus toxoid conjugate and their molecular genetic structures,epitope specificities,and protective efficacies in normal and complement-deficient mice were determined. Nucleic acid sequence analysis of three MAbs (A7,1A2,and 7C5) revealed that they use two different V(H)3 genes (A7 and 1A2 both use V3-15) and three different V(kappa) gene segments. The MAbs were found to have similar affinities for PPS-3 but different epitope specificities and CDR3 regions. Both A7 and 7C5 had a lysine at the V(H)-D junction,whereas 1A2 had a threonine. Challenge experiments with serotype 3 S. pneumoniae in BALB/c mice revealed that both 10- and 1- micro g doses of A7 and 7C5 were protective,while only a 10- micro g dose of 1A2 was protective. Both A7 and 7C5 were also protective in mice lacking either an intact alternative (FB(-/-)) or classical (C4(-/-)) complement pathway,but 1A2 was not protective in either strain. Our data suggest that PPS-3 consists of epitopes that can elicit both highly protective and less protective antibodies and that the superior efficacies of certain antibodies may be a function of their structures and/or specificities. Further investigation of relationships between structure,specificity,and efficacy for defined MAbs to PPS may identify antibody features that might be useful surrogates for antibody (and vaccine) efficacy.
View Publication
J. L. Nieto-Torres et al. (jul 2011)
Virology 415 2 69--82
Subcellular location and topology of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus envelope protein.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus (CoV) envelope (E) protein is a transmembrane protein. Several subcellular locations and topological conformations of E protein have been proposed. To identify the correct ones,polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies specific for the amino or the carboxy terminus of E protein,respectively,were generated. E protein was mainly found in the endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment (ERGIC) of cells transfected with a plasmid encoding E protein or infected with SARS-CoV. No evidence of E protein presence in the plasma membrane was found by using immunofluorescence,immunoelectron microscopy and cell surface protein labeling. In addition,measurement of plasma membrane voltage gated ion channel activity by whole-cell patch clamp suggested that E protein was not present in the plasma membrane. A topological conformation in which SARS-CoV E protein amino terminus is oriented towards the lumen of intracellular membranes and carboxy terminus faces cell cytoplasm is proposed.
View Publication
Johnston AJ et al. (SEP 2015)
Cell 162 6 1365--78
Targeting of Fn14 prevents cancer-induced cachexia and prolongs survival
Summary The cytokine TWEAK and its cognate receptor Fn14 are members of the TNF/TNFR superfamily and are upregulated in tumors. We found that Fn14,when expressed in tumors,causes cachexia and that antibodies against Fn14 dramatically extended lifespan by inhibiting tumor-induced weight loss although having only moderate inhibitory effects on tumor growth. Anti-Fn14 antibodies prevented tumor-induced inflammation and loss of fat and muscle mass. Fn14 signaling in the tumor,rather than host,is responsible for inducing this cachexia because tumors in Fn14- and TWEAK-deficient hosts developed cachexia that was comparable to that of wild-type mice. These results extend the role of Fn14 in wound repair and muscle development to involvement in the etiology of cachexia and indicate that Fn14 antibodies may be a promising approach to treat cachexia,thereby extending lifespan and improving quality of life for cancer patients.
View Publication