Literature DB >> 2459243

Antitubulin antibodies. II. Natural autoantibodies and induced antibodies recognize different epitopes on the tubulin molecule.

T Matthes1, A Wolff, P Soubiran, F Gros, G Dighiero.   

Abstract

Natural and induced antitubulin antibodies were compared for their epitope recognition on alpha- and beta-tubulin subunits by immunoenzymatic assays and Western blot techniques on partially digested tubulin molecules. Our results indicated that natural autoantibodies recognized different epitopes from those recognized by induced antibodies, because: 1) all polyspecific natural autoantibodies tested so far recognized the same or very overlapping epitopes in the central part of both alpha- and beta-subunits (between positions 100 and 300 on the tubulin amino acid sequence) and that this epitope differed from the various epitopes recognized by induced antitubulin antibodies on the amino-terminal or carboxy-terminal parts of the tubulin subunits; 2) one human myeloma protein (monoclonal (m)IgA, kappa) with a monospecific antitubulin activity bound to an epitope around position 310 on both alpha- and beta-subunits and a second human mIg (mIgM, kappa) with a monospecific anti-beta activity bound to an epitope on the carboxy-terminal part of the subunit around amino acid position 350. Both epitopes differed from epitopes recognized by induced antitubulin antibodies. These results thus confirmed our previous findings indicating that natural and induced antitubulin antibodies do not share cross-reactive idiotopes.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 2459243

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  13 in total

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3.  Direct involvement of the isotype-specific C-terminus of beta tubulin in ciliary beating.

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Review 4.  From natural polyreactive autoantibodies to à la carte monoreactive antibodies to infectious agents: is it a small world after all?

Authors:  J P Bouvet; G Dighiero
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5.  Identification of protein succination as a novel modification of tubulin.

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8.  In vitro modulation of cisplatin accumulation in human ovarian carcinoma cells by pharmacologic alteration of microtubules.

Authors:  R D Christen; A P Jekunen; J A Jones; F Thiebaut; D R Shalinsky; S B Howell
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9.  Exposure of beta-tubulin regions defined by antibodies on an Arabidopsis thaliana microtubule protofilament model and in the cells.

Authors:  Yaroslav Blume; Alla Yemets; Yarina Sheremet; Alexey Nyporko; Vadym Sulimenko; Tetyana Sulimenko; Pavel Dráber
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10.  Conjugates of ubiquitin cross-reactive protein distribute in a cytoskeletal pattern.

Authors:  K R Loeb; A L Haas
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  1994-12       Impact factor: 4.272

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