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Title: Mouse monoclonal antibody to embryonic antigen: development, cross-reactivity with rodent and human tumors, and preliminary polypeptide characterization. Author: Payne WJ, Coggin JH. Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst; 1985 Sep; 75(3):527-44. PubMed ID: 2411994. Abstract: Hybridomas producing IgM and IgG monoclonal antibodies (MoAb) to embryonic or fetal antigens (EA) were obtained in a completely syngeneic system. Lethally irradiated, 13-day-gestation, C57BL/6N mouse fetal cells or KCI extracts of these fetal cells obtained from primaparous donors were used as immunogens in several regimens to induce splenocytes in C57BL/6N mice that were utilized to form the hybridomas following fusion with a mouse myeloma line. Successful growth and cloning of the IgM-producing hybridomas required supplementation with factor(s) produced in the growth medium of the macrophage cell line RAW 264.7. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was employed to screen the primary fusion hybridomas for antibody directed against fetal cell or adult cell determinants with the use of freshly explanted tissues. Glutaraldehyde-fixed fetal cells as well as crude fetal cell membranes were used as EA+ target cells (i.e., cell lines known to activate T-lymphocyte-mediated tumor resistance) in a solid-phase ELISA to perform quantitative ELISA adsorption tests of the MoAb. The anti-EA monoclonal IgM and the IgG detected common, embryo-specific antigen(s) on mouse, hamster, and human fetuses. Term fetal cells and adult normal tissues of the mouse, hamster, and human did not express cross-reactive determinants for the MoAb by absorption analysis and/or by direct binding in ELISA. EA expression as oncofetal antigens could also be detected with the monoclones on several rodent tumor cell lines tested as well as on a variety of human carcinomas but not on a spectrum of normal human tissues with the use of indirect ELISA absorption and affinity gel and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analyses. Fluorescence analysis with the monoclones demonstrated specific reactivity with the surface of EA+ tumor cells in the FACS IV flow cytometer. The responsible antigen was carried on a 44- and a 200-kilodalton polypeptide.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]