Publication | Open Access
Circumventing tolerance to generate autologous monoclonal antibodies to the prion protein.
110
Citations
34
References
1996
Year
ImmunologyCellular PrpMolecular BiologyProtein FoldingPrp SequencePrion DiseaseProtein MisfoldingAutoantibodiesAntibody EngineeringProteomicsAutologous Monoclonal AntibodiesProtein FunctionAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityCell BiologyAutoantibody ProductionPrp GeneNatural SciencesPrion ProteinSystems BiologyMedicine
Prion diseases are disorders of protein conformation and do not provoke an immune response. Raising antibodies to the prion protein (PrP) has been difficult due to conservation of the PrP sequence and to inhibitory activity of alpha-PrP antibodies toward lymphocytes. To circumvent these problems, we immunized mice in which the PrP gene was ablated (Prnp 0/0) and retrieved specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) through phage display libraries. This approach yielded alpha-PrP mAbs that recognize mouse PrP. Studies with these mAbs suggest that cellular PrP adopts an unusually open structure consistent with the conformational plasticity of this protein.
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