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  • Title: Monoclonal antibodies to the cockroach nervous system.
    Author: Denburg JL, Caldwell RT, Marner JA.
    Journal: J Comp Neurol; 1986 Mar 01; 245(1):123-36. PubMed ID: 3514693.
    Abstract:
    In the cockroach nervous system individual motor neurons may be identified with respect to their position in the thoracic ganglia and to the muscles they innervate. When their axons are cut they have the ability to regrow such that when regeneration is completed they have specifically reinnervated their normal target muscles. This suggests the existence of a specific intercellular recognition process between motor neurons and muscles, and that neurons innervating different muscles are biochemically distinct from one another. The goal of this study was to use hybridoma techniques to obtain monoclonal antibodies that bind to some motor neurons and not others. Mice were injected with whole nerve cord and hybridoma supernatants were screened immunohistochemically on sections of ganglion and leg muscle. The monoclonal antibodies were categorized according to four types of specificity: tissue, regional, cell-type, and neuron-subset specificities. Antibodies expressing neuron-subset specificity were obtained very rarely. The probability of their occurrence could be increased by treating the mice with immunosuppressant drugs after initial administration of immunogen or by fixing the immunogen with paraformaldehyde in a manner similar to that of the tissue sections used in the screening process. Two of the neuron-subset specific monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) are of particular interest with respect to the goals of this study. They bind to axon terminals in the muscles of some neurons and not others. They do not bind to neuronal cell bodies in the ganglion, which makes identification of the neurons difficult. However, from the known innervation pattern of the coxal depressor muscles it appears that one of these MAbs selectively binds to axon terminals from either the inhibitory motor neurons or the dorsal unpaired median cells. Other antibodies of interest bind selectively to the synapse-rich neuropile in the ganglia or to peripheral parts of the nervous system like the nerve roots.
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