1. The mouse monoclonal antibody 4E3 is specific for the G1m17 allotype of human IgG1.
- Author
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Movérare R, Lind P, and Marknell DeWitt Å
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Mice, Immunoglobulin Allotypes immunology, Immunoglobulin Allotypes genetics, Multiple Myeloma immunology, Multiple Myeloma genetics, Multiple Myeloma diagnosis, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Myeloma Proteins, Immunoglobulin G immunology, Immunoglobulin G blood, Antibodies, Monoclonal immunology, Antibody Specificity
- Abstract
Allotype is an amino acid variation within the immunoglobulin isotypes. Four allotypes have been described for human IgG1 and two of them (G1m3 and G1m17) are located at position 214 in the CH1 region of the gamma chain. Various diseases have been associated with allotype expression, making the allotype research an interesting field in immunology. However, allotype-specific reagents are rare. In the present study the specificity of a widely used and commercially available IgG1-specific monoclonal antibody named 4E3, described as binding to the hinge region of IgG1, was evaluated. Using the ImmunoCAP™ assay technology, surprisingly no IgG1 was measured in 13 of 23 human serum and plasma samples when 4E3 was used in an antibody-enzyme conjugate as detection reagent. Further evaluation of 4E3 using eight IgG1 myeloma paraproteins revealed that 4E3 did not bind to three of them. No association was seen between the binding pattern and myeloma light chain glycosylation or the kappa or light chain use. By comparing the myeloma paraprotein binding patterns of 4E3 and TM14 (a monoclonal antibody with known G1m3 specificity), it was indicated that 4E3 only bound to myeloma paraproteins expressing the G1m17 allotype. This was confirmed using recombinant human antibodies expressing either the G1m3 or G1m17 allotype. The G1m17 bias of 4E3 seen using ImmunoCAP was also observed in microtiter plate-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. The antibody 4E3 has a G1m17 bias limiting its use in assays to measure IgG1 antibodies. However, it may be a valuable allotype-specific reagent., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors are employed by Thermo Fisher Scientific, Uppsala, Sweden., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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