Publication | Closed Access
Isolation of a Monoclonal Antibody with Specificity for Commonly Employed Vaccine Strains of Newcastle Disease Virus
37
Citations
9
References
1986
Year
VaccinationNewcastle Disease VirusLa SotaVeterinary VaccineVaccine DevelopmentImmunologyViral PathogenesisVirologyVirus-host InteractionVaccine DesignMurine Myeloma CellsMedicineVaccine ResearchAnimal VirusMonoclonal Antibody
A monoclonal antibody, AVS-I, was produced from a hybridization of murine myeloma cells and splenocytes from mice immunized with the La Sota strain of Newcastle disease virus (NDV). The hybridoma producing AVS-I, selected from 184 NDV-positive supernatants, is one of two supernatants that reacted exclusively with lentogenic strains in an indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. AVS-I can also be assayed by hemagglutination-inhibition (HI), which was used to test selected reference avian paramyxovirus (PMV) strains of types 1 to 3. NDV vaccines La Sota and B1 and field isolates from chickens, turkeys, pigeons, and cockatoos were also used as antigens. AVS-I had a high binding affinity for all La Sota and B1 strains, including vaccines. The antibody bound with a lower titer to the Australian Queensland V4 and Ulster strains, but it did not bind to the F strain, a lentogenic strain from England. AVS-I was HI-negative against the other PMV reference strains. AVS-I may be valuable for identifying field isolates antigenically similar to La Sota and B1 and rapidly differentiate those vaccine strains from more virulent viruses.
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