首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 437 毫秒
1.
Monoclonal antibodies are an important tool in the study of botryllid ascidians’ immunology and developmental biology. Here we describe the development of a panel of 38 monoclonal antibodies that are specific to Botryllus schlosseri (Ascidiacea; subfamily Botryllinae) cell surface antigens. Many of these hybridomas recognize (by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and immunohistochemistry) epitopes of Botrylloides subpopulations (SP) II and III from the Mediterranean coast of Israel and show, on blood cell smear assays, reactions with subsets of Botryllus circulating blood cells. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analyses using antibodies positive for botryllid tissues revealed up to 3.6% positive cells. ELISA screenings were performed with 64 new monoclonal antibodies on 5 different individual botryllid ascidian colonies (B. schlosseri, Botrylloides). The positive antibodies in this panel identified a large number of different antigenic determinants, some of which distinguish Botryllus versus Botrylloides colonies, and other, different colonies within these two species, or different cell types within tissues, embryos, and buds of individual colonies. Only 21 monoclonal antibodies tested positive with all colonies. Cross-reactivity with at least one Botrylloides colony was recorded in 49 hybridomas that identified Botryllus cells. This wide panel of monoclonal antibodies is the first such detailed set of monoclonals available for studies on botryllid ascidians.  相似文献   

2.
C. Grief  P. J. Shaw 《Planta》1987,171(3):302-312
A series of monoclonal antibodies and a polyclonal antiserum have been used to investigate the localisation and pathway of biosynthesis of the cell-wall hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein 2BII in the alga Chlamydomonas reinhardii. Glyco-protein precursors were detected within the endoplasmic reticulum using a polyclonal antiserum raised to the deglycosylated 2BII. Monoclonal antibodies which are known to recognise different carbohydrate epitopes of 2BII were found to label two distinct regions of the Golgi stack. The immunolabelling results demonstrate that there is compartmentation of protein synthesis and glycosylation steps for these O-glycosidically linked glycoproteins. Newly synthesised glycoproteins are transported from the Golgi apparatus to the cell surface via two distinct routes. They then undergo assembly into a cell wall, the inner wall layer being formed first and probably functionaing as a template within which the outer crystalline wall layers are assembled.Abbreviations DGP deglycosylated glycoprotein - ER endoplasmic reticulum - MAC monoclonal antibody centre - M r relative molecular mass  相似文献   

3.
To investigate the structure ofEscherichia coli ribosomal protein S13 in 30S ribosomal subunits, we have previously generated 22 S13 specific monoclonal antibodies and mapped their specific epitopes to the S13 sequence. The availability of these S13 epitopesin situ has been further examined by incubating these monoclonal antibodies with 30S ribosomal subunits and analyzing formation of monoclonal antibody-linked ribosome dimers by sucrose gradients centrifugation. We have found that none of the 22 monoclonal antibodies makes ribosome dimers individually as do typical antisera. However, one monoclonal antibody, designated AS13-MAb 2, reacts with 30S ribosomal subunits to form immunocomplexes sedimenting faster than subunit monomers. When AS13-MAb 2 is paired with any one of three monoclonal antibodies directed to the S13 C-terminal epitopes, dimer formation is observed. Other pairs of monoclonal antibodies directed to distinct S13 epitopes have been tested similarly for dimer formation. Monoclonal antibody AS13-MAb 22, directed to the N-terminal region of 22 residues, also causes subunits to form typical dimers, but only if paired with one of the three monoclonal antibodies directed to the S13 C-terminal region. The close proximity of the epitopes recognized by AS13-MAbs 2 and 22 has been established by the mutual competition between the antibodies binding to intact 30S subunits. These results corroborate our previous observation, using polyclonal antibodies, that S13 has more than one epitope exposed on 30S subunits. Our finding that sequences on both ends of the S13 molecule are immunochemically accessible provides information about the molecular organization of S13in situ.  相似文献   

4.
Mapping the Prion Protein Using Recombinant Antibodies   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The fundamental event in prion disease is thought to be the posttranslational conversion of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into a pathogenic isoform (PrPSc). The occurrence of PrPC on the cell surface and PrPSc in amyloid plaques in situ or in aggregates following purification complicates the study of the molecular events that underlie the disease process. Monoclonal antibodies are highly sensitive probes of protein conformation which can be used under these conditions. Here, we report the rescue of a diverse panel of 19 PrP-specific recombinant monoclonal antibodies from phage display libraries prepared from PrP deficient (Prnp0/0) mice immunized with infectious prions either in the form of rods or PrP 27-30 dispersed into liposomes. The antibodies recognize a number of distinct linear and discontinuous epitopes that are presented to a varying degree on different PrP preparations. The epitope reactivity of the recombinant PrP(90-231) molecule was almost indistinguishable from that of PrPC on the cell surface, validating the importance of detailed structural studies on the recombinant molecule. Only one epitope region at the C terminus of PrP was well presented on both PrPC and PrPSc, while epitopes associated with most of the antibodies in the panel were present on PrPC but absent from PrPSc.  相似文献   

5.
Sperm of the brown alga Fucus serratus are highly differentiated, biflagellate, naked cells. Immunolocalisation studies, employing monoclonal antibodies (MAbs — designated FS1 to FS12) raised against antigens of these sperm cells, have revealed that some sperm surface components are distributed over the entire cell, whereas others are restricted to, or occur preferentially on, the surface of the anterior flagellum or cell body. This report describes the use of these MAbs in Western-blot procedures and antigen-modification binding assays to determine the nature of these sperm surface components. Monoclonal antibodies which bind to antigens found on the cell body and both flagella (FS3, FS4, FS6, FS8, FS10) recognise carbohydrate epitopes of a high-molecular-weight glycoprotein (Mr=205 kDa). These MAbs were initially chosen at random from a much larger number of antibodies which bound to sperm in a similar fashion, indicating that this glycoprotein is an immunodominant antigen. Though these MAbs compete under conditions of limited antigen availability, differences in the effects of periodate on antibody binding and differences in other binding data indicate that the MAbs recognise epitopes of this glycoprotein which are neighbouring or overlapping, rather than common. The MAb FS9, which has a similar binding pattern to the above antibodies, also seems to bind to carbohydrate epitopes, but the antigen recognised by this antibody could not be identified in Western-blotting procedures. The MAbs FS7 and FS12, which bind to the mastigonemes on the anterior flagellum and to the cell body and posterior flagellum, recognise a set of glycoproteins in the molecular-weight range 40–250 kDa. The evidence indicates that the antibodies are binding to N-linked carbohydrate side chains of these glycoproteins. Three MAbs that bind to the anterior flagellum (FS2, FS5 and FS11) recognise protein antigens in the molecular-weight range 90–250 kDa; it is not known whether these antigens are glycosylated. The MAb FS1, which binds primarily to the sperm cell body, could not be used in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays or Western-blotting procedures and the antigen recognised by this antibody is so far uncharacterised.Abbreviations ELISA enzyme linked immunosorbent assay - HRP-RAMIG horseradish-peroxidase-labelled rabbit anti mouse immunoglobulin - Ig immunoglobulin - kDa kilodalton - MAb monoclonal antibody - Mr relative molecular mass - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis We are grateful to AFRC for financial support under the cell signalling initiative.  相似文献   

6.
Monoclonal antibodies have been raised against the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-binding proteins of photosystem I (LHCI) using a photosystem (PS) I preparation (PSI-200) wild-type from barley (Hordeum vulgare L. cv. Svaløf's Bonus) as the antigen. These antibodies cross-reacted with a minor light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein of PSII (Chla/b-P1=CP29), but not with the major one, LHCII (=Chla/b-P2**). Similarly, a monoclonal antibody to Chla/b-P1, elicited by a PSII preparation as the antigen, cross-reacted with LHCI, but not LHCII. This explains why an antigen consisting of LHCII, free of LHCI, but contaminated with Chla/b-P1, can elicit antibodies which cross-react with LHCI. Immunoblot assays showed that LHCI and Chla/b-P1 have at least two epitopes in common. Immunogold labelling of thin-sectioned wild-type thylakoids confirmed a preferential localisation of Chla/b-P1 in grana partition membranes and LHCI in stroma lamellae. The presence of LHCI was demonstrated in barley mutants lacking the PSI reaction centre (viridis-zb 63) and chlorophyll b (chlorina-f2), and was correlated with the presence of long-wavelength (730 nm) fluorescence emission at 77 K. The mutant viridis-k 23, which has a 77 K long-wavelength fluorescence peak at 720 nm, was shown by immune-blot assay to lack LHCI, although Chla/b-P1 was present.Abbreviations Chl-P chlorophyll-protein - CM Carlsberg Monoclonal - Da dalton - LHC light-harvesting complex - PAGE polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis - PSI, II photosystem I, II - PSI-200 PSI containing LHCI polypeptides - SDS sodium dodecyl sulphate  相似文献   

7.
The cross-reactivity of diverse monoclonal antibodies against phytochrome from Zea and Avena was tested by enzyme-linked immunosorbentassay (ELISA) and by immunoblotting. About 40 antibodies were selected by means of nondenatured phytochrome; all of them reacted with sodium dodecyl sulfate denatured homologous antigen on immunoblots. The epitopes for 14 antibodies (4 raised against Avena and 10 against Zea phytochrome) were localized in 6 regions of the phytochrome molecule by means of Western blot analysis of proteolytic fragments of known localization. Results of studies on the inhibition of antibody binding by other antibodies were largely compatible with these latter findings. Except in a few cases, inhibition occurred when antibodies were located on the same or a closely adjacent region. As demonstrated by 16 species, cross-reactivity with phytochromes from other Poaceae was high. Greater losses in cross-reactivity were observed only with antibodies recognizing an epitope in the vicinity of the carboxyl terminus of 118-kg · mol-1 phytochrome. Cross-reactivity with phytochrome from dicotyledons was restricted to a few antibodies. However, phytochrome(s) from plants illuminated for 24 h or more could be detected. One of the antibodies that recognized phytochrome from dicotyledons was also found to recognize phytochrome or a protein of 120–125 kg·mol-1 from several ferns, a liverwort and mosses. This antibody (Z-3B1), which was localized within a 23.5-kg·mol-1 section of Avena phytochrome (Grimm et al., 1986, Z. Naturforsch. 41c, 993), seems to be the first antibody raised against phytochrome from a monocotyledon with such a wide range of reactivity. Even though epitopes were recognized on different phytochromes, the strength of antibody binding indicated that these epitopes are not necessarily wholly identical.Abbreviations ELISA enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay - McAb monoclonal antibody - PBS phosphate-buffered saline - Pfr (Pr) far-red-absorbing (red-absorbing) form of phytochrome - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

8.
Summary Immunolocalisation studies, using flax leaf material infected with the flax rust fungus,Melampsora lini, and isolated haustorial complexes, have shown that three anti-calmodulin monoclonal antibodies bind to the haustorial wall of the fungus. The epitopes recognised by these antibodies are inserted into the wall during the early stages of haustorium development and remain in the wall throughout the life of the haustorium. The epitopes are present in both compatible and incompatible reactions and are oligosaccharide in nature. The results provide evidence for molecular differentiation within the haustorial complex ofM. lini.Abbreviations BMM butyl-methylmethacrylate - CaM calmodulin - FITC fluorescein isothiocyanate - MAb monoclonal antibody  相似文献   

9.
Monoclonal antibodies (mcAbs) specific to alkaline isoenzymes of horseradish peroxidase were used to characterize the antigenic properties of horseradish peroxidase. The results of a competitive binding assay indicated that monoclonal antibodies can be divided into three groups directed against distinct parts of the protein. The interaction of monoclonal antibodies with native and modified horseradish peroxidase showed also three different patterns of reactivity. Antibodies from groups I and II are directed against epitopes which are conformational and formed by tertiary structure elements. Epitopes recognized by these antibodies are sensitive to heme removal or partial denaturation of peroxidase. Antibodies from group III bind specifically with epitopes consisting of primary or secondary structure elements. The antigenic determinants recognized by antibodies from group III PO 1 and 36F 9 were shown to be linear (continuous) and formed by amino acid residues 261-267 and 271-277, respectively, as determined by the peptide scanning method (PEPSCAN). The location of revealed linear antigenic determinants in the molecular structure of peroxidase is analyzed.  相似文献   

10.
Murine monoclonal antibodies to protoplast membrne antigens were generated using mouse myelomas and spleen cells from mice immunized with Nicotiana tabacum L. leaf protoplasts. For selecting antibody-secreting clones, a sensitive and rapid enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for monoclonal antibody binding to immobilized cellular membrane preparations or immobilized protoplasts was developed. With intact protoplasts as immobilized antigen, the ELISA is selective for antibodies that bind to plasma-membrane epitopes present on the external surface of protoplasts. Using the membrane ELISA, a total of 24 hybridoma lines were identified that secreted antibodies to plant membrane epitopes. The protoplast ELISA and subsequent immunofluorescence studies identified four hybridoma lines as secreting antibodies which bound to the external surface of protoplasts and cells. The corresponding antigens were not species- or tissue-specific, were periodatesensitive, and were located in membranes which equilibrated broadly throughout a linear sucrose gradient. When protein blots of electrophoretically separated membrane proteins were probed with these antibodies, a band of Mr 14 kilodaltons (kDa) and a smear of bands of Mr 45–120 kDa were labeled. An additional set of three antibodies appeared by immunofluorescence to bind to the plasma membrane of broken but not intact protoplasts and labeled membranes equilibrating at a density of approx. 1.12 kg·l-1 in a linear sucrose density gradient. These classes of monoclonal antibodies enlarge the library of monoclonal antibodies (Norman et al. 1986, Planta 167, 452–459) available for the study of plant plasma-membrane structure and function.Abbreviations ELISA Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay - Ig immunoglobulin - kDa kilodalton - Mr relative molecular mass - SDS-PAGE sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis  相似文献   

11.
The glycan epitopes termed stage-specific embryonic antigens (SSEA) occur on glycoproteins and glycolipids in mammals. However, it is not known whether these epitopes are attached to N- or O-glycans on glycoproteins and/or on glycolipids in the developing mouse embryo. In this paper the expression of the antigens SSEA-1, SSEA-3, SSEA-4 and LeY was examined on ovulated eggs, early embryos and blastocysts lacking either complex and hybrid N-glycans or core-1 derived O-glycans. In all cases, antigen expression determined by fluorescence microscopy of bound monoclonal antibodies to embryos at the stage of development of maximal expression was similar in mutant and control embryos. Thus, none of these developmental antigens are expressed solely on either complex N- or core 1-derived O-glycans attached to glycoproteins in the preimplantation mouse embryo. Furthermore, neither of these classes of glycan is essential for the expression of SSEA-1, SSEA-3, SSEA-4 or LeY on mouse embryos.  相似文献   

12.
Summary SJL mice, which are high responders to Staphylococcal nuclease (nuclease), were immunized and used to produce hybridoma cell lines secreting anti-nuclease monoclonal antibodies (mAb). Ten stable clones were derived from a single fusion. Seven of these produced antibodies of the IgG1, isotype and were more precisely characterized for antigenic specificity. Only one hybridoma cell line (54-10-4) produced anti-nuclease antibodies capable of inhibiting enzymatic activity of nuclease. Binding inhibition analyses strongly suggest that the other monoclonal antibodies, which failed to inhibit nuclease activity detect two different antigenic regions, or epitopes, of the molecule: epitope cluster 1 domain is defined by hybridomas 54-2-7, 54-5-2, 54-9-8, and 54-10-8; epitope cluster 2 by 54-5-1 and 54-1-9. Because of its capacity to inhibit nuclease enzymatic activity mAb 54-10-4 was considered specific for a third epitope of the nuclease molecule called epitope 3. Binding studies of these monoclonal antibodies were extended to peptide fragments of the nuclease molecule in order to examine possible cross-reactions with such fragments, as has previously been reported for antibodies purified from polyclonal antisera. Monoclonal antibodies specific for epitope cluster 1 on the native molecule also bound to the fragments 1–126 and 49–149 but failed to bind to fragment 99–149, suggesting that the corresponding epitope(s) is determined by amino acids localized between residues 49 and 99. The epitope clusters 2 and 3 appeared to be expressed only on the native molecule. Monoclonal antibodies of different clusters exhibited very different migration patterns on isoelectric focusing while monoclonal antibodies of the same cluster were indistinguishable, which suggests that they may have originated from the same B cell precursor. Taken together these data suggest that this panel of monoclonal antibodies detects at least three distinct epitopes of the nuclease molecule, one of which could be involved in the determination of the enzymatic site.  相似文献   

13.
Histoplasma capsulatum contains multiple antigens, among them the H antigen and M antigen, which are useful in serologic testing for histoplasmosis. We prepared 7 mouse monoclonal antibodies (5 IgG, 2 IgM) to histoplasmin, and compared these with polyclonal histoplasmin antibodies raised in rabbits and mice. Both monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies were high titered by ELISA. Colloidal gold immune electron microscopy (CGIEM) showed that polyclonal antibodies to histoplasmin or H antigen bound at multiple sites in the cell wall, cytoplasm, and nucleus of Histoplasma yeast cells. In contrast, antibodies to M antigen selectively label the cell membrane and antibodies to alkali soluble cell wall antigen label only the cell wall. Polyclonal antibodies cross reacted extensively with other fungi, both by ELISA and CGIEM. Monoclonal antibodies stained only cytoplasmic epitopes, but also cross reacted with other fungi by electron microscopy. Only periodate treated H antigen elicited polyclonal antibodies which were more specific than those of untreated H antigen or histoplasmin.  相似文献   

14.
In this study, a specific monoclonal antibody againstListeria monocytogenes was screened using an SPR biosensor Monoclonal antibodies were bound to protein L, after which theL. monocytogenes cells were subjected to an affinity assay. Protein L was immobilized on a carboxymethyl dextran (CM-Dex) surface via an amine coupling method and utilized repeatedly by regeneration. The monoclonal antibody, ‘A18’, was selected and employed for the high-sensitivity detection ofL. monocytogenes. Under optimized conditions, 103 cells/ml or 50 cells were detected by the SPR biosensor.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The oomycetes are a class of protists that produce biflagellate asexual zoospores. Members of the oomycetes have close phylogenetic affinities with the chromophyte algae and are widely divergent from the higher fungi. This review focuses on two genera,Phytophthora andPythium, which belong to the family Pythiaceae, and the order Peronosporales. These two genera contain many species that cause serious diseases in plants. Molecules on the surface of zoospores and cysts of these organisms are likely to play crucial roles in the infection of host plants. Knowledge of the properties of the surface of these cells should thus help increase our understanding of the infection process. Recent studies ofPhytophthora cinnamomi andPythium aphanidermatum have used lectins to analyse surface carbohydrates and have generated monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) directed towards a variety of zoospore and cysts surface components. Labelling studies with these probes have detected molecular differences between the surface of the cell body and of the flagella of the zoospores. They have been used to follow changes in surface components during encystment, including the secretion of an adhesive that bonds the spores to the host surface. Binding of lectin and antibody probes to the surface of living zoospores can induce encystment, giving evidence of cell receptors involved in this process. Freeze-substitution and immunolabelling studies have greatly augmented our understanding of the synthesis and assembly of the zoospore surface during zoosporogenesis. Synthesis of a variety of zoospore components begins when sporulation is induced. Cleavage of the multinucleate sporangium is achieved through the progressive extension of partitioning membranes, and a number of surface antigens are assembled onto the zoospore surface during cleavage. Comparisons of antibody binding to many isolates and species ofPhytophthora andPythium have revealed that surface components on zoospores and cysts exhibit a range of taxonomic specificities. Surface antigens or epitopes may occur on only a few isolates of a species; they may be species-specific, genus-specific or occur on the spores of both genera. Spore surface antigens thus promise to be of significant value for studies of the taxonomy and phylogeny of these protists, as well as for disease diagnosis.Abbreviations MAbs monoclonal antibodies - ConA Concanavalin A - SBA soybean agglutinin - WGA wheat germ agglutinin - gps glycoproteins  相似文献   

16.
Gonzalez-Ceron, L., Rodriguez, M. H., Wirtz, R. A., Sina, B. J., Palomeque, O. L., Nettel, J. A., and Tsutsumi, V. 1998.Plasmodium vivax:A monoclonal antibody recognizes a circumsporozoite protein precursor on the sporozoite surface.Experimental Parasitology90, 203–211. The major surface circumsporozoite (CS) proteins are known to play a role in malaria sporozoite development and invasion of invertebrate and vertebrate host cells.Plasmodium vivaxCS protein processing during mosquito midgut oocyst and salivary gland sporozoite development was studied using monoclonal antibodies which recognize different CS protein epitopes. Monoclonal antibodies which react with the CS amino acid repeat sequences by ELISA recognized a 50-kDa precursor protein in immature oocyst and additional 47- and 42-kDa proteins in older oocysts. A 42-kDa CS protein was detected after initial sporozoite invasion of mosquito salivary glands and an additional 50-kDa precursor CS protein observed later in infected salivary glands. These data confirm previous results with otherPlasmodiumspecies, in which more CS protein precursors were detected in oocysts than in salivary gland sporozoites. A monoclonal antibody (PvPCS) was characterized which reacts with an epitope found only in the 50-kDa precursor CS protein. PvPCS reacted with allP. vivaxsporozoite strains tested by indirect immunofluorescent assay, homogeneously staining the sporozoite periphery with much lower intensity than that produced by anti-CS repeat antibodies. Immunoelectron microscopy using PvPCS showed that the CS protein precursor was associated with peripheral cytoplasmic vacuoles and membranes of sporoblast and budding sporozoites in development oocysts. In salivary gland sporozoites, the CS protein precursor was primarily associated with micronemes and sporozoite membranes. Our results suggest that the 50-kDa CS protein precursor is synthesized intracellularly and secreted on the membrane surface, where it is proteolytically processed to form the 42-kDa mature CS protein. These data indicate that differences in CS protein processing in oocyst and salivary gland sporozoites development may occur.  相似文献   

17.
Monoclonal antibodies recognizing two classes of developmentally regulated plant cell surface components – arabinogalactan-proteins (AGPs) and extensins – have been used to immunolabel cells at the root apices of four species with different characteristics of pericycle and vascular tissue development. Root apices of pea (Pisum sativum L.), radish (Raphanus sativus L.), carrot (Daucus carota L.) and onion (Allium cepa L.) were immunolabelled with the anti-AGP monoclonal antibodies JIM4 and JIM13 and anti-extensin monoclonal antibodies JIM11, JIM12, JIM19 and JIM20. All of these antibodies recognized subsets of pericycle cells in at least one, but never all, of these species. The restricted patterns of epitope occurrence also reflected vascular cell development. The differences in patterns of antibody recognition in the four species are discussed in relation to the possible roles of these cell surface molecules in cell differentiation and root patterning events. Received: 11 March 1997 / Accepted: 20 May 1997  相似文献   

18.
Summary YopM, an effector, YopB, a translator, and LcrV, a regulator, are proteins forming important componants of type III secretion system of Yersinia pestis. Recombinant truncated YopM of 32 kDa, YopB of 28 kDa and LcrV of 31 kDa sizes were utilized for priming BALB/c mice for the generation of monoclonal antibodies following standard poly-ethylene glycol (PEG) fusion protocol. Nine, 10 and 6 stabilized hybridoma cell lines could be generated against YopM, YopB and LcrV proteins, respectively. All these monoclonal antibodies were found reactive to Y. pestis strain A1122 and did not show any cross-reactivity to Y. enterocolitica, Y. pseudotuberculosis, Y. kristensenii, Y. frederiksenii, Y. intermedia, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhi, Salmonella abortus-equi and Staphylococcus aureus tested by ELISA and Western blotting. Monoclonal antibodies also exhibited reactivity to their corressponding native protein antigens in Y. pestis i.e. 42 kDa for YopM, 41 kDa for YopB and 37 kDa for LcrV in immunoblotting. Reactivity of monoclonal antibodies was further assessed on 26 Y. pestis isolates including 18 from 1994 plague outbreak regions (11 from pneumonic patients, 7 from rodents) and 8 from rodents of Deccan plateau of Southern India by Western blotting as well as by sandwich ELISA. The monoclonal antibodies could specifically locate the expression of yopM, yopB and lcrV genes among these Indian Y. pestis strains as well. Results obtained with sandwich ELISA and Western blot were identical to those observed by PCR. Monoclonal antibodies to Yops, therefore, can be employed for an early and reliable identification of virulent Y. pestis strains.  相似文献   

19.
To study common and variant specific antigenic determinants on variant surface glycoproteins from Trypanosoma brucei, we have selected four serologically cross-reacting variant populations. Monoclonal antibodies were raised against the purified variant surface glycoproteins from each variant trypanosome population. Six monoclonal antibodies bind to segmental epitopes and one binds to a topographically assembled epitope. Amino acid compositions of these variant surface glycoproteins reveal striking conservation of certain residues including cysteine and charged amino acids. We also find that all seven monoclonal antibodies used in this study bind to protein determinants not exposed on the surface of the living trypanosome. Only one monoclonal antibody exhibits homologous specificity, while the remainder display cross-reactivity for three or all four variant surface glycoproteins. In addition, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis peptide mapping and Western blots probed with each monoclonal antibody reveal significant peptide homologies. Furthermore, two pairs of monoclonal antibodies recognize two epitopes that are possibly immunodominant. The significance of these findings is discussed in terms of the structural similarities and differences among variant surface glycoproteins.  相似文献   

20.
Monoclonal antibodies recognizing un-esterified (JIM5) and methyl-esterified (JIM7) epitopes of pectin have been used to locate these epitopes by indirect immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy in the root apex of carrot (Daucus carota L.). Both antibodies labelled the walls of cells in all tissues of the developing root apex. Immunogold labelling observed at the level of the electron microscope indicated differential location of the pectin epitopes within the cell walls. The un-esterified epitope was located to the inner surface of the primary cell walls adjacent to the plasma membrane, in the middle lamella and abundantly to the outer surface at intercellular spaces. In contrast, the epitope containing methyl-esterified pectin was located evenly throughout the cell wall. In root apices of certain other species the JIM5 and JIM7 epitopes were found to be restricted to distinct tissues of the developing roots. In the root apex of oat (Avena sativa L.), JIM5 was most abundantly reactive with cell walls at the region of intercellular spaces of the cortical cells. JIM7 was reactive with cells of the cortex and the stele. Neither epitope occurred in walls of the epidermal or root-cap cells. These pattern of expression were observed to derive from the very earliest stages of the development of these tissues in the oat root meristem and were maintained in the mature root. In the coleoptile and leaf tissues of oat seedlings, JIM5 labelled all cells abundantly whereas JIM7 was unreactive. Other members of the Gramineae and also the Chenopodiaceae are shown to express similar restricted spatial patterns of distribution of these pectin epitopes in root apices.Abbreviations CDTA 1,2-diaminocyclohexane tetraacetic acid - RG rhamnogalacturonan J.P.K. was supported by the Agricultural and Food Research Council Cell Signalling and Recognition Programme. We thank J. Cooke and N. Stacey for technical assistance, H.A. Schols, Drs. P. Albersheim and A. Darvill for pectic polysaccharides, and Dr. R.R. Selvendran and M. McCann for useful discussions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号