Preparation and Use of Monospecific Antisera to Capitella SP. I.

Author(s):  
Eugene D. Gallagher ◽  
J.P. Grassle ◽  
D.D. Trueblood ◽  
M.G. Gleason
Author(s):  
M. Kraemer ◽  
J. Foucrier ◽  
J. Vassy ◽  
M.T. Chalumeau

Some authors using immunofluorescent techniques had already suggested that some hepatocytes are able to synthetize several plasma proteins. In vitro studies on normal cells or on cells issued of murine hepatomas raise the same conclusion. These works could be indications of an hepatocyte functionnal non-specialization, meanwhile the authors never give direct topographic proofs suitable with this hypothesis.The use of immunoenzymatic techniques after obtention of monospecific antisera had seemed to us useful to bring forward a better knowledge of this problem. We have studied three carrier proteins (transferrin = Tf, hemopexin = Hx, albumin = Alb) operating at different levels in iron metabolism by demonstrating and localizing the adult rat hepatocytes involved in their synthesis.Immunological, histological and ultrastructural methods have been described in a previous work.


1974 ◽  
Vol 31 (01) ◽  
pp. 040-051 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustav Gaudernack ◽  
Åse Gladhaug Berre ◽  
Bjarne Østerud ◽  
Hans Prydz

SummaryMonospecific antisera against the human coagulation factor X have been raised in rabbits by injections of purified antigen. Such antiserum was used to study the cross-reacting material without factor X activity which is present in the blood of warfarin-treated patients and animals as well as to study the changes in factor X during coagulation. One patient with congenital factor X deficiency was also studied.A complete identity was found between factor X in Macaca mulatta and human blood. During warfarin treatment antigenically cross-reacting material appeared in plasma. This was not adsorbed on BaSO4, and inhibited the coagulation activity of normal factor X.Both this material, normal factor X and the cross-reacting material in plasma from a patient congenitally deficient in factor X gave rise to split products during coagulation by the intrinsic pathway, i. e. all of them served as substrates for the intrinsic activator of factor X.


1984 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 736-742
Author(s):  
C Svensson ◽  
G Akusjärvi

We have developed a sensitive transient expression assay in 293 cells to study the effect of VA RNAs on the translation of adenovirus mRNAs. Monolayers of 293 cells were transfected with mixtures of recombinant plasmids encoding adenovirus-specific transcription units and plasmids encoding VA RNAs. Transfected cells were labeled with [35S]methionine for ca. 15 h, and labeled cell extracts were prepared. Changes in the protein expression caused by VA RNA cotransfection were measured by immunoprecipitation, using monospecific antisera prepared against adenovirus-specific polypeptides. Using this experimental design, we demonstrate that VA RNAI stimulates the translation of both early and late adenovirus mRNAs. Synthesis of the E3 19,000-dalton glycoprotein and the E2A 72,000-dalton DNA binding protein was stimulated between 10 and 20 times by VA RNAI cotransfection. Synthesis of the late hexon polypeptide was also stimulated, although translation of hexon was from an aberrant mRNA lacking the second and third segments of the common tripartite leader attached to late adenovirus mRNAs. VA RNAII, although very homologous to VA RNAI, does not function as a translational stimulator.


2006 ◽  
Vol 189 (5) ◽  
pp. 1856-1865 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sami S. A. Ashgar ◽  
Neil J. Oldfield ◽  
Karl G. Wooldridge ◽  
Michael A. Jones ◽  
Greg J. Irving ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Two putative autotransporter proteins, CapA and CapB, were identified in silico from the genome sequence of Campylobacter jejuni NCTC11168. The genes encoding each protein contain homopolymeric tracts, suggestive of phase variation mediated by a slipped-strand mispairing mechanism; in each case the gene sequence contained frameshifts at these positions. The C-terminal two-thirds of the two genes, as well as a portion of the predicted signal peptides, were identical; the remaining N-terminal portions were gene specific. Both genes were cloned and expressed; recombinant polypeptides were purified and used to raise rabbit polyclonal monospecific antisera. Using immunoblotting, expression of the ca.116-kDa CapA protein was demonstrated for in vitro-grown cells of strain NCTC11168, for 4 out of 11 recent human fecal isolates, and for 2 out of 8 sequence-typed strains examined. Expression of CapB was not detected for any of the strains tested. Surface localization of CapA was demonstrated by subcellular fractionation and immunogold electron microscopy. Export of CapA was inhibited by globomycin, reinforcing the bioinformatic prediction that the protein is a lipoprotein. A capA insertion mutant had a significantly reduced capacity for association with and invasion of Caco-2 cells and failed to colonize and persist in chickens, indicating that CapA plays a role in host association and colonization by Campylobacter. In view of this demonstrated role, we propose that CapA stands for Campylobacter adhesion protein A.


1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. R. Roberts ◽  
C. R. Fuller ◽  
H. Worden ◽  
J. Stuart ◽  
H. Reisner ◽  
...  

We previously characterized a human inhibitor for Factor IX in patient P.W.B, with Hemophilia B as an IgG4, λ immunoglobulin of restricted electrophoretic mobility. This restriction to a minor IgG subclass led us to characterize a second Factor IX inhibitor occurring in patient R. J. after an anamnestic response to Factor IX. On preparative zone electrophoresis the inhibitor migrated with a broad zone of mobility in the anodal portion of the γ peak and was restricted to the anodal portion of the IgG containing fractions. Gel filtration on calibrated 1.5 M sepharose columns revealed inhibitor activity in fractions corresponding to a molecular weight of 150,000. The inhibitor was further characterized by the technique of antibody neutralization using monospecific antisera to immunoglobulin classes, subclasses and light chain types in the zone of antibody excess. The inhibitor was completely neutralized by antibody to IgG whereas antisera to IgA, IgM, IgD and IgE had no effect. Neutralization was abolished by absorption of the IgG antiserum with purified IgG. Neutralization with antisera specific for light chains indicated a mixture of light chain types with an estimated ϰ/λ ratio of 6/1. Neutralization with antisera specific for IgG subclasses revealed a mixture of IgG subclasses. The Factor IX inhibitor was thus characterized as a polyclonal IgG immunoglobulin. Sepharose conjugates of R. J. globulin effect complete removal of Factor IX from normal plasma on an immunoabsorbent column and biologically active Factor IX may be eluted with 1600-fold purification.


Blood ◽  
1985 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
pp. 496-500 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Wolf ◽  
C Boyer ◽  
A Tripodi ◽  
D Meyer ◽  
MJ Larrieu ◽  
...  

Abstract A qualitative defect of antithrombin III (AT III) has been demonstrated over three generations in eight members of an Italian family by the discrepancy between a normal amount of antigen and decreased antithrombin and anti-Xa activity in the presence or in the absence of heparin. By two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis in the absence of heparin, two peaks of AT III were present in all patients' plasma. AT III was purified from normal and propositus plasma by sulfate dextran precipitation followed by heparin affinity chromatography. The elution profile of the patient's AT III was abnormal and allowed the separation of two populations of AT III, normal and abnormal. The first fraction (normal AT III) contained AT III activity, migrated as a single peak by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis and by sodium dodecyl sulfate- polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), demonstrated a single band with a molecular weight (mol wt) identical to that of normal AT III (60,000). Conversely, the last fraction, devoid of AT III activity, migrated as a single abnormal peak by two-dimensional immunoelectrophoresis in the absence of heparin. By SDS-PAGE, two bands were observed: one with a mol wt of 60,000 and a second one with a mol wt of 120,000. Western blots clearly demonstrated cross-reactivity of the 120,000 and 60,000 mol wt bands with monospecific antisera to human AT III. Reduction of the 120,000 mol wt band converted it to a single 60,000 mol wt band, suggesting the presence of an abnormal dimeric form of AT III. The name AT III Milano is proposed for this new variant.


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