L8 - Antibody-based technologies Flashcards
What are antibodies?
Are secreted forms of BCRs
Bind free Ag
Are monoclonal – have a unique BCR – clonal selection
What can antibodies bind?
They can bind almost all biological materials – proteins, CHO, nucleic acids
Their binding can be well characterised & often of very high affinity
What is plasma?
The fluid phase of the blood
What is serum?
Serum is the clotted fluid phase of the blood
What is antiserum?
Serum from immunised person/animal known as antiserum
What does antiserum contain?
Antiserum will contain antibodies that bind the Ag (as well as those that were present before the immunisation), along with other soluble blood components but doesn’t contain cells or clotting proteins
An antiserum may contain many different antibodies that bind the same Ag – even if the Ag is a single purified protein
How can you purify different antibodies away from other serum proteins?
Gel filtration chromatography – separates based on MW
Affinity chromatography – separates using beads with antigens on
• Antibodies we want to purify will bind & be retained in the column
• Can then change the conditions to remove the antibodies off the beads & out the column
Limitations of using antisera
Once the antiserum has been used, more antibodies generated will never be exactly the same
How can we overcome the fact that antibodies produced by antisera will never be the exact same?
What if the individual B cell clones could be kept in culture to continuously produce a single antibody
Patients with multiple myelomas were known to produce large amounts of homogenous antibodies, although the specificity of the antibodies were unknown
Georges Kohler, Cesar Milstein & Niles Jerne devised a method for fusing mouse myeloma cells with B cells that were making antibodies of known specificity
MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES
Generation of monoclonal antibodies
1) Take a mouse
2) Immunise it with an antigen you want to have an antibody against (antigen A)
3) Harvest the spleen once the B cells have made antibodies to the antigen (after 2-6 weeks)
4) Fuse spleen cells with tumour cells with PEG - produces cells with 2 nuclei
5) Need a selection technique to select fusions which were from a B cell & an immortal B cell – the hybrids
6) Need to find the hybrid that’s making the correct antibody for the antigen
8) Can now make cell that grows forever & makes the antibody we want (hybridoma)
Where can monoclonal antibodies be stored?
In liquid nitrogen
What is phage display?
Even though animals can make up to a possible 10^11 different antibodies (predicted number based on number of heavy VDJ and light VJ/combinations/somatic possibilities), recombinant DNA technology now means that this number can actually be made using a technique called phage display
How does phage display work?
Can take genes out of the B cells & put them into artificial systems
Uses phages to generate all the possible antibodies that can be made – artificial way to make even more antibodies
What do methods involving antibodies rely on?
Many methods using antibodies rely on labels attached to the antibodies in order to detect them
Label should not affect antibody/Ag binding
Gives a signal when it interacts with a substrate
Many methods using antibodies use secondary antibodies to detect the primary antibody binding to its Ag
Why are secondary antibodies used?
This increase the sensitivity
Has a multiplication effect
Same signal with half as much antigen – can detect smaller amounts of antibodies