Immunochemical characterization of carbohydrate antigens from fungi, protozoa and mammals by monoclonal antibodies directed to glycan epitopes

1995 
Cell surface carbohydrates constitute the major antigenic determinants of fungi and protozoa. Glycoconjugates also represent a large variety of antigens or markers present in mammals such as histo-blood groups ABO, differentiation and heterophile antigens, among others. This article focuses on the general properties of glycoconjugate antigens and production and characterization of the anti-carbohydrate monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs). It describes the specificity and some properties of monoclonal antibodies directed against carbohydrate epitopes present in tumor-associated glycoproteins, in clycosaminoglycans of higher eukaryotes and in glycolipid antigens of protozoa and fungi. The epitopes recognized by the anti-carbohydrate MoAbs range from one sugar unit up to ten sugar units. Although most anti-carbohydrate MoAbs are directed predominantly toward terminal sugar residues, a few MoAbs are also reactive with internal sugar residues. The fine structure of the carbohydrate epitopes has been chemically defined by [H]NMR, GC/MS of alditol acetates of partially permethylated compounds, FAB/MS, degradation with exoglycosidases and inhibition with different methyl-glycosides and oligosaccharides.
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