Production of a New Murine Monoclonal Antibody with Fy6 Specificity and Characterization of the Immunopurified N‐Glycosylated Duffy‐Active Molecule

1994 
A murine monoclonal antibody (mAb i3A; IgG1, kappa light chain) was obtained using human red blood cells as immunogen. The antibody showed Fy6 specificity since it agglutinated all but Fy(a-b-)-untreated red cells and failed to agglutinate chymotrypsin-treated cells. An erythrocyte membrane protein of 42–46 kD was revealed as the major component recognized by the antibody on immunoblots. The antibody also bound to 92- to 95- and 200-kD proteins, tentatively identified as oligomers of the 42- to 46-kD monomeric form. The affinity-purified Fy6-active protein was converted to a sharp band of 35 kD after N-glycanase treatment. The molecule appeared as a slightly broadly band after neuraminidase treatment but was not further altered by O-glycanase. The i3A mAb bound to 6,000±1,000 receptor sites on either Fy(a-b+), Fy (a+b+) and Fy(a+b-) red cells with an affinity constant in the range of 3–6 times 108 M-1. No binding was observed to other blood cells nor to several cells (B, T, myelomonocytic and erythro-leukemia cell lines). Also, the bulk of i3A-Fy6 immune complexes could be dissociated from the red cell membrane with as low as 0.2% Triton X-100, showing that the Fy6-active glycoprotein is not tightly associated with the membrane skeleton. Our data obtained with a new monoclonal antibody directed to the Fy6 antigen demonstrate that the blood group Duffy-active component is a red cell-specific glycoprotein carrying one or more N-linked oligosaccharides.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    23
    References
    23
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []