| Literature DB >> 6749134 |
P T Shi, J P Riehm, P E Todd, S J Leach.
Abstract
Polyacrylamide resins [Atherton et al., Bioorg. Chem. 8, 351-370 (1979)] have been found suitable for solid-phase radioimmunoassay of peptides synthesised on the same supports; they are sufficiently stable during side-chain deprotection and swell sufficiently in aq. media to admit antibody molecules to the sites of peptide attachment. A re-examination of five synthetic peptide sequences corresponding to (15-21), (56-62), (94-99), (113-119) and (145-151) of beef myoglobin analogous to those delineated by Atassi [Immunochemistry 12, 423-438 (1975)] for sperm whale myoglobin shows that they all bind anti-beef myoglobin antibodies raised in rabbits, with binding capacities in the order V = III greater than IV greater than I = II. The resin-bound peptide (72-88) binds such antibodies even more extensively, as do certain sequential variants of peptide V. Other peptides, bound to polyacrylamide or polystyrene resins but unrelated to any of the five sequences and varying in size and amino acid composition and sequence were also tested with various antisera. It was concluded that the antibody binding properties of the 30 or so small peptides (two-seven residues) are dominated by their cationic and/or hydrophobic properties. In small peptides, therefore, antibody binding can be safely interpreted only in terms of general structural properties but not in terms of biological specificity. The latter property becomes assessable only with peptides representing larger areas of antigenic protein surfaces.Entities:
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Year: 1984 PMID: 6749134 DOI: 10.1016/0161-5890(84)90064-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Immunol ISSN: 0161-5890 Impact factor: 4.407