Antibody recognition of a human chorionic gonadotropin epitope (hCGβ 66-80) depends on local structure retained in the free peptide

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Abstract

Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is an important biomarker in pregnancy and oncology, where it is routinely detected and quantified by specific immunoassays. Intelligent epitope selection is essential to achieving the required assay performance. We present binding affinity measurements demonstrating that a typical β3-loop-specific monoclonal antibody (8G5) is highly selective in competitive immunoassays and distinguishes between hCGβ 66-80 and the closely related luteinizing hormone (LH) fragment LHβ 86-100, which differ only by a single amino acid residue. A combination of optical spectroscopic measurements and atomistic computer simulations on these free peptides reveals differences in turn type stabilized by specific hydrogen bonding motifs. We propose that these structural differences are the basis for the observed selectivity in the full protein. © 2011 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Gregor, C. R., Cerasoli, E., Schouten, J., Ravi, J., Slootstra, J., Horgan, A., … Crain, J. (2011). Antibody recognition of a human chorionic gonadotropin epitope (hCGβ 66-80) depends on local structure retained in the free peptide. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 286(28), 25016–25026. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M111.246637

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