Use of monoclonal antibodies against factor H to investigate the role of a membrane-associated protein antigenically related to H in C3b-receptor function.

  • Schulz T
  • Scheiner O
  • Alsenz J
  • et al.
25Citations
Citations of this article
5Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Three murine monoclonal IgG1 kappa-antibodies, MAH-1, MAH-2, and MAH-3, were raised against factor H purified from human plasma. In cross-inhibition studies MAH-3 did not compete with MAH-1 and MAH-2, and vice versa, for the binding to H, whereas MAH-1 and MAH-2 inhibited each other. MAH-1 and MAH-2 inhibited the binding of H to C3b attached to an ELISA plate as well as to C3b bound to sheep erythrocytes by means of the classical pathway convertase and of C3b to H attached to an ELISA plate. The determinant defined by MAH-1 and MAH-2 was no longer accessible on H bound to C3b. In contrast, MAH-3 interfere with the binding of H to C3b or vice versa only to a smaller extent but recognized a determinant still accessible on H bound to C3b and was able to agglutinate EAC14o23b-H in an indirect Coombs test. All three antibodies were shown to bind to tonsil cells and Raji cells in an indirect cell ELISA. The membrane-associated molecule detected by these antibodies had an apparent m.w. of 140,000 D in SDS-PAGE. All three antibodies partially inhibited the binding of EAC14o23b to tonsil lymphocytes and, in the presence of 0.1 mM DFP, to Raji cells; binding of EAC14o23bi and EAC14o23d to tonsil cells was not affected. We conclude that MAH-3 recognizes a determinant distinct from the ones recognized by MAH-1 and MAH-2, the latter possibly defining identical epitopes that are located close to the binding site for C3b. The fact that these two distinct epitopes could be detected on a 140,000-D membrane-associated protein from lymphoid cells strongly suggests that this molecule is at least antigenically related to serum H and shares with H a region carrying the binding site for C3b. The rosette inhibition studies imply that this structure is important for the binding of C3b-coated particles to lymphoid cells.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Schulz, T. F., Scheiner, O., Alsenz, J., Lambris, J. D., & Dierich, M. P. (1984). Use of monoclonal antibodies against factor H to investigate the role of a membrane-associated protein antigenically related to H in C3b-receptor function. The Journal of Immunology, 132(1), 392–398. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.132.1.392

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free