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. 1988 Aug 25;263(24):11768-75.

Antigen-antibody interaction. Synthetic peptides define linear antigenic determinants recognized by monoclonal antibodies directed to the cytoplasmic carboxyl terminus of rhodopsin

Affiliations
  • PMID: 2457026
Free article

Antigen-antibody interaction. Synthetic peptides define linear antigenic determinants recognized by monoclonal antibodies directed to the cytoplasmic carboxyl terminus of rhodopsin

R S Hodges et al. J Biol Chem. .
Free article

Abstract

The specificities of four monoclonal antibodies rho 1D4, 1C5, 3A6, and 3D6 prepared by immunization of rod outer segments containing rhodopsin have been defined using synthetic peptides. All of these antibodies interact within the 18 residues at the COOH terminus of rhodopsin and recognize linear antigenic determinants of 4-11 residues. Twenty-seven synthetic peptide analogs of varying lengths of native sequence or containing single amino acid substitutions at each position of the COOH-terminal 18 residues have provided some insight into the mechanism of antigen-antibody binding. Our results clearly demonstrate that antibodies can be highly specific at key positions as shown by the loss of binding on single amino acid substitutions in the binding site. In contrast single amino acid substitutions at other positions in the binding site only affect affinity for some antibodies. Ionic interactions can dominate immunogenic determinants. Immunogenic determinants are not restricted to highly charged hydrophilic regions on the surface of a protein and may be dominated by hydrophobic interactions. Although certain side chains can dominate the interaction of the antigen with antibody, our results are in agreement with the interpretation that the free energies of all the contact points are additive and a certain free energy must be present to achieve binding. Antibodies with different specificities directed to the same region of the protein antigen can be produced in an immune response. Peptide antigens representing regions of a protein antigen bind best to the anti-protein antibody when the sequence is shortened to contain only those residues binding to the specificity site in the antibody. Cross-reactivity between protein antigens can be explained by conservation of the critical residues in the combining site.

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