[Preparation of human monoclonal antibodies reactive with human melanoma and the possibility of clinical application]
- PMID: 2835935
[Preparation of human monoclonal antibodies reactive with human melanoma and the possibility of clinical application]
Abstract
Human monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were prepared from the lymph node and peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) of the patients with melanoma. NS-1 fusion with lymph node lymphocytes resulted in a higher number of growing hybrids than LICR-LON-HMy2 (LICR-2) fusion. Virtually no hybrids were obtained from NS-1 or LICR-2 fusions with PBL. Epstein-Barr virus transformed the lymphocytes from lymph node and periphered blood with equal efficiency, and the yield of proliferating cultures for antibody screening was more than 10 to 30-fold greater than that obtained by fusion techniques. However, once antibody-producing cultures had been identified, stability and clonability of EBV-transformed cells were poorer than that of NS-1 hybrid cells. To combine the strengths of both methods, cultures of EBV-transformed cells were fused with NS-1, and hybrid clones were isolated that showed vigorous growth, clonability, and stable antibody secretion. Detailed specificity analysis of four mAbs indicated detection of a class 1 (unique) melanoma antigen (GXM1), a class 2 (shared) melanoma antigen (HJM1) and two class 3 (widely distributed) antigen (FCM1 and DSM1). HJM1 reacted most strongly with GD3 and would be a candidate for immunotherapy of melanoma.
Similar articles
-
Cell-surface antigens of melanoma recognized by human monoclonal antibodies.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1987 Apr;84(8):2416-20. doi: 10.1073/pnas.84.8.2416. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1987. PMID: 3031684 Free PMC article.
-
Pokeweed mitogen-stimulated human lymphocytes fused to LICR-2 (HMY2) generate human-human hybridomas producing monoclonal IgG antibodies reactive to human breast carcinoma and malignant melanoma.Hum Antibodies Hybridomas. 1990;1(3):154-9. Hum Antibodies Hybridomas. 1990. PMID: 2103359
-
Analysis of human monoclonal antibodies derived from lymphocytes of patients with cancer.Fed Proc. 1984 Jun;43(9):2465-9. Fed Proc. 1984. PMID: 6327400
-
The use of Epstein-Barr virus transformation for the production of human monoclonal antibodies.Exp Biol. 1984;43(1):35-55. Exp Biol. 1984. PMID: 6099808 Review.
-
Monoclonal antibodies: methods and clinical laboratory applications.Clin Physiol Biochem. 1983;1(2-5):160-72. Clin Physiol Biochem. 1983. PMID: 6396016 Review.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous