Publication | Closed Access
Chemistry of Antibody Binding to a Protein
251
Citations
32
References
1987
Year
Antibody BindingImmunocytochemical TechniqueProtein AssemblyMolecular BiologyLocal StereochemistryImmunoassaysAntibody RecognitionProtein FoldingImmunochemistryAntibody EngineeringMolecular RecognitionMulti-protein AssemblyBiophysicsBiochemistryAntibody ScreeningNegative Electrostatic PotentialNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryProtein EngineeringMedicine
The chemistry of antibody recognition was studied by mapping the antigenicity of the protein myohemerythrin with peptide homologs of the protein sequence. The results suggest that the entire protein surface is antigenic, but the probability of there being antibodies to a given site is influenced by local stereochemistry. Although accessible to an antibody binding domain, the least reactive positions cluster in the most tightly packed and least mobile regions and are closely associated with narrow, concave grooves in the molecular surface containing bound water molecules. The most frequently recognized sites form three-dimensional superassemblies characterized by high local mobility, convex surface shape, and often by negative electrostatic potential.
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