Recognition of two Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus-specific epitopes on antigen P1 by using monoclonal antibodies: binding to each epitope can be inhibited by serum from dust mite-allergic patients.
Open Access
- 1 November 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Immunology
- Vol. 133 (5) , 2488-2495
- https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.133.5.2488
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies were raised against Antigen P1, the major allergen of the house dust mite (Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus). The majority were Antigen P1 specific, isotype IgG1, and did not react with a comparable D. farinae allergen. These antibodies bound 38 to 50% of 125I Antigen P1 in antigen-binding assays (titer greater than or equal to 1/1,000,000), and the quantities of IgG antibody in ascites were 2 to 4 logs greater than those in polyclonal mouse antiserum or in serum from a mite-allergic patient. Two IgM antibodies showed weak binding to Antigen P1 but reacted strongly with D. pteronyssinus in enzyme immunoassay (titer greater than or equal to 1/100,000). Assessments of the specificity of the IgG antibodies by using two inhibition radioimmunoassays suggested that they were directed against two different epitopes. Antibodies 10B9 F6 and 5H8 C12 were purified by preparative isoelectric focusing (isoelectric points of pI 6.25 and 7.4, respectively) and radiolabeled with 125I. Cross-inhibition experiments, using ascites dilutions to inhibit binding of each radiolabeled antibody to Antigen P1, confirmed that these antibodies recognized two distinct epitopes. Analysis of antibodies from 39 clones/hybrids showed that the majority were directed against the same epitopes as either 10B9 F6 or 5H8 C12 (3 out of 39 [8%] and 29 out of 39 [74%], respectively). None of the monoclonal antibodies significantly inhibited (greater than 10%) human IgE binding to Antigen P1 in the radioallergosorbent test. However, 12 of 14 sera from mite allergic patients inhibited binding by the monoclonal antibodies. One serum from a mite-allergic patient inhibited binding of both 10B9 F6 and 5H8 C12 by greater than 85% and showed parallel inhibition curves. The results suggest that these monoclonal antibodies could be used to assay Antigen P1 in both D. pteronyssinus and house dust extracts. It should also be possible to use monoclonal antibodies in inhibition assays to define the antigenic/allergenic determinants recognized by human IgG and IgE antibodies on this mite allergen.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
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