Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026764 (multiple myeloma)
36,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two peptides, P123 and P124, representing amino acid sequences His 542-Lys 557 and Tyr 459-Arg 472, respectively, of the CH4 domain of rat IgE and predicted to be located on accessible regions of the protein were synthesized by a solid-phase procedure. Rabbits were immunized with the peptides conjugated to KLH and their antisera were tested for reactivity with free peptide and rat IgE by inhibition-ELISA. Each animal produced antibodies which reacted specifically with its immunizing peptide (titre greater than 1/62,500), but not with other synthetic peptides of similar chain-length and composition. Antisera directed against peptides P123 and P124 specifically bound purified rat IgE (IR 162) and IgE in whole myeloma serum (greater than 1/6400), but showed no reaction with normal rat serum proteins and only very low binding to purified human IgE. In addition the binding of anti-peptide sera to rat IgE could be completely inhibited with either homologous peptide or purified rat IgE, but not by other peptides or purified human IgE. Heating rat IgE for 1 hr at 56 degrees C enhanced its binding to anti-peptide antibodies by between 4- and 60-fold, but markedly reduced its reactivity with a rabbit anti-rat IgE (Fc) serum. These results suggest that antibodies directed against the synthetic peptides employed recognize and specifically bind to sites within the CH4 domain of rat IgE represented by their respective immunizing peptides. Furthermore, these antibodies are capable of detecting subtle alterations in structural conformation resulting from heating at 56 degrees C. Epitopes represented by peptides P123 and P124 may contribute to the heat-sensitive cytophilic region of rat IgE.
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PMID:Use of synthetic peptides in the production and characterization of antibodies directed against predetermined specificities in rat immunoglobulin E. 370 75

An alpha-amylase inhibitor (called the 0.53-inhibitor, Maeda, K., Takamori, Y. and Oka, O. (1982) Agric. Biol. Chem. 41, 2873-2875) and the carboxymethylated inhibitor were used to immunize mice (strain BALB/c) according to a procedure described earlier (McMaster, W.R. and Williams, A.F., (1979) Eur. J. Immunol. 9, 426-433). After fusion of spleen cells with NS-1 myeloma cells, three stable clones producing antibodies against the inhibitor were obtained. The binding characteristics of the monoclonal antibodies, AWAI-1, AWAI-2 and AWAI-3, to the inhibitor were analyzed by radioimmunoassay. Two of these monoclonal antibodies to the alpha-amylase inhibitor did not show any binding affinity towards carboxymethylated inhibitor, suggesting that the main antigenic determinant on the native inhibitor is tertiary-structure dependent. The monoclonal antibodies obtained cross-reacted with three other alpha-amylase inhibitors (the 0.19-, the 0.36- and the 0.38-inhibitor) in wheat and these were separated together with the 0.53-inhibitor from the rest of inhibitors by immunoaffinity chromatography. One stable clone producing antibody against the carboxymethylated inhibitor was also established, AWAI-4. The antigenic determinant to this antibody was found to be included in the region of Met(5)-Lys(25) on the carboxymethylated inhibitor.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibodies against an alpha-amylase inhibitor from wheat kernel. 387 82

An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for determination of antibodies against the zona pellucida was developed and compared with the already available indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) technique. Sera from 100 women with explained and unexplained infertility were screened for the presence of autoantibodies to the zona pellucida by ELISA and IIF techniques. Porcine/goat zonae immobilized on activated microtitre plates or solubilized zona pellucida antigens adsorbed on poly-L-lysine-coated microtitre plates were used as a solid phase in an ELISA. Assay of anti-zona pellucida antibodies in xenogeneic and allogeneic sera was performed by incubation of test samples with the solid phase against human serum supplied by WHO as a reference positive control, followed by incubation with staphylococcal protein A conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. The ELISA was effectively used to screen the production of monoclonal antibodies from mouse myeloma X mouse splenocyte hybridomas. The sensitivity of the ELISA was more than 2500-fold greater than that of the IIF technique. Significantly high titres of autoantibodies to zona pellucida were found in patients with unexplained infertility as compared with patients with a known cause of infertility, and their normal counterparts.
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PMID:Enzyme-linked immunosorbent determination of autoantibodies to zona pellucida as a possible cause of infertility in women. 388 60

The development of functional Fc receptors (FcR) during induced differentiation with the tumor promoter, phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), was studied in the murine tumor cell line, P388. PMA induced the appearance of FcR on the membranes of P388 cells as indicated by the binding of IgG-coated sheep red blood cells (IgG-SRBC). Concentrations of PMA as low as 1 ng/ml were sufficient to induce the expression of FcR as well as to inhibit cellular division and to induce adherence in the P388 tumor cell line; however, optimal FcR induction occurred at PMA concentrations of 10-100 ng/ml. Immunofluorescent analysis with heat-aggregated myeloma proteins indicated that PMA induced FcR which were capable of binding IgG2a and IgG2b immunoglobulins, but not IgG1. Adherence to a substratum was determined to be a second required signal for expression of FcR, since PMA induction of P388 tumor cells in teflon dishes failed to fully develop FcR and adherence of P388 cells to poly-L-lysine-coated culture dishes in the absence of PMA was insufficient for FcR expression. FcR which appeared after PMA induction were non-functional in the sense that membrane-bound IgG-SRBC were not ingested to any significant extent by the tumor cells. However, if FcR induction occurred in the presence conA-induced rat spleen cell culture supernatants, phagocytosis of membrane-bound erythrocytes occurred. These findings suggest that for the expression of FcR which are capable of particle internalization, at least three identifiable membrane-transmitted signals are required during differentiation.
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PMID:Induction of functional Fc receptors in P388 leukemia cells. Requirement for multiple differentiation signals. 397 48

A mouse myeloma protein with high affinity for 2,4-dinitrophenyl (Dnp) ligands was reacted with the bromoacetyl derivatives of N-Dnp-ethylenediamine and (epsilon)-N-Dnp-L-lysine. Up to 1.4 sites per protein molecule were covalently labeled. The labeling reactions were essentially completely blocked by a large excess of Dnp ligands that do not combine covalently (e.g., (epsilon)-Dnp-L-lysine). Analyses of the labeled protein revealed that the bromoacetyl derivative of N-Dnp-ethylenediamine reacted exclusively with tyrosyl in the light chain, while the derivative of (epsilon)-Dnp-L-lysine reacted exclusively with lysyl in the heavy chain. The findings support the conclusion that chains are involved in forming specific combining sites.
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PMID:Affinity labeling of the heavy and light chains of a myeloma protein with anti-2,4-dinitrophenyl activity. 409 5

Protein 460 is a mouse myeloma gamma A(2) protein that competitively binds two small haptens, 2,4-epsilon-dinitrophenyl-L-lysine (Dnp-Lys) and 2-methyl-1:4-naphthaquinone thioglycollate (MenTG), to the antibody-combining region. The intact protein has a relatively inaccessible sulfhydryl group on each heavy chain. When it is substituted with a bulky reagent the binding affinity for MenTG decreases, while the binding of Dnp-Lys remains the same. Guanidine.HCl selectively reduces binding of Dnp-Lys; dimethylsulfoxide selectively reduces binding of MenTG. Papain digestion of protein 460 followed by column chromatography gave two fractions: one contained both binding activities and the other contained the sulfhydryl group. The affinity for Dnp-Lys of the first fraction is the same as that of the whole molecule, while affinity for MenTG is decreased. Since selective alteration of one or the other binding activity can occur in different ways, it seems likely that even though the haptens compete with each other, there is some spatial separation between the groups of contact amino-acid residues involved in the binding of these two haptens. These findings do not support the hypothesis that an immunoglobulin molecule carries combining sites complementary only to a single hapten or to a structurally related series of haptens, but rather suggests that the antibody-combining site may be a polyfunctional region capable of binding several structurally dissimilar haptens. We discuss a mechanism whereby polyfunctional combining sites can give rise to an antibody population (immune serum) that has a high degree of specificity to a single hapten.
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PMID:Contact regions for dinitrophenyl and menadione haptens in an immunoglobulin binding more than one antigen. 411 41

To explore the possibility that the affinity of some myeloma proteins for 2,4-dinitrophenyl (DNP) ligands is the consequence of a "strange" (i.e., unexpected) cross-reaction for more natural ligands, a variety of substances (primarily derivatives of purines, pyrimidines, naphthaquinone) were tested for ability to block the binding of [(3)H]-epsilon-DNP-L-lysine by protein 315, an IgA mouse myeloma protein with high affinity for DNP ligands. The most impressive inhibiting activity was observed with 2-methyl-1,4-napthaquinone (menadione, vitamin K(3)). The affinity (intrinsic association constant) of protein 315 for menadione was 5 x 10(5) L/M (at 4 degrees C). Because the same affinity was measured in direct-binding assays (e.g., equilibrium dialysis) and in an indirect one based on the assumption of competitive binding with DNP-lysine, it is likely that menadione and DNP bind at overlapping sites in the protein's combining region. This conclusion is supported by molecular models which reveal some common structural features in these ligands. Hence it is not surprising that antinitrophenyl antibody preparations, raised by conventional immunization procedures (anti-2,4-DNP; anti-2,6-DNP; anti-2,4,6-TNP) also bind menadione with considerable affinity. As with DNP ligands, when menadione binds to protein 315 or to conventional antinitrophenyl antibodies, some of the protein's tryptophan fluorescence is quenched, there is a change in the ligand's absorption spectrum (hypochromia and/or red shift), and the binding is temperature-dependent (exothermal).
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PMID:The strange cross-reaction of menadione (vitamin K3) and 2,4-dinitrophenyl ligands with a myeloma protein and some conventional antibodies. 413 7

1. Peptide maps of Fc fragments or heavy chains of 36 G myeloma proteins and two "heavy chain disease" proteins belonging to the four gamma-chain subgroups revealed very striking similarities between them. However differences in a few peptides were noted. This was most pronounced for the Ge(gamma(2)d) subgroup which lacked three peptides characteristic of the other three subgroups. While Fc fragments from different proteins belonging to the same subgroup appeared very similar, minor differences in addition to those based on currently recognized Gm factors were occasionally noted. 2. Fc fragments from Gm(a+) We(gamma(2)b) proteins had a peptide previously shown to be characteristic of normal Gm(a+) gammaG-globulins. Fc fragments from Gm(a-) molecules belonging to the We(gamma(2)b), Vi(gamma(2)c), or Ne(gamma(2)a) subgroups, whether Gm(b+), Gm(f+), or Gm(-), had the peptide previously identified in Gm(b+f+) normal gammaG-globulin. This "non-a" peptide was absent in peptide maps from Gm(-) molecules of the Ge(gamma(2)d) subgroup which contained instead another peptide with the same electrophoretic mobility but migrating slightly further on chromatography. 3. Both the "a" and "non-a" peptides were pentapeptides having three amino acids in common, and differing in the other two. The "a" peptide contained one residue of lysine, aspartic acid, threonine, leucine, and glutamic acid. The "non-a" peptides prepared from Gm(b+), Gm(f+), and Gm(-) proteins were identical and contained one residue of lysine, threonine, and methionine sulfone, and two residues of glutamic acid. 4. Several possible mechanisms for the origin of these differences, and their possible role in serologic specificity are discussed.
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PMID:Structural studies of human gamma-G-myeloma proteins of different antigenic subgroups and genetic specificities. 416 48

Various enzymatic derivatives of the murine myeloma protein IgA(MOPC-315) were subjected to hapten-binding quantitation and circular dichroic analysis in an attempt to ascertain the structural localization and functional definition of the immunoglobulin active site. The extrinsic Cotton effects observed with near saturation of the active site of the derivatives using epsilon-Dnp-L-lysine were qualitatively and quantitatively identical when normalized with respect to their macromolecular content of Dnp-binding sites; ellipticity maxima of 378 and 438 nm and an ellipticity minimum of 325 nm were recorded. Fluorescence quenching data confirmed the molecular nature of the derivation products of IgA(MOPC-315) but also introduced disparity with respect to binding kinetics, i.e., K values of 2.31 x 10(6), 6.62 x 10(6), and 2.06 x 10(7) M(-1) were determined for IgA(MOPC-315), Fab'(MOPC-315), and Fv(MOPC-315), respectively. We speculate that the results can be explained by possible modulating effects on haptenbinding contributed by novel conformations introduced through proteolysis.
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PMID:A functional examination of hapten-binding derivatives from a murine myeloma protein with immunoglobulin features. 452 70

An instrument is described that will maintain a population of mammalian cells at constant cell density while automatically monitoring the growth rate of the culture and the extent of precursor incorporation into a variety of cell products. The apparatus was used in an investigation of cyclic changes in the incorporation of labelled precursors into the DNA, RNA, total protein and myeloma protein synthesized in synchronous cultures of a mouse myeloma line. The incorporation of [(3)H]uridine into trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material reveals a slight periodicity, with maxima and minima corresponding to late S phase and the mitotic phases respectively. The incorporation of [(3)H]lysine into total intracellular protein also shows a slight oscillation, with maxima and minima occurring during the respective G2 and mitotic phases. Cyclical changes in the synthesis of serologically precipitable myeloma protein were found to vary somewhat according to the conditions used to synchronize the cells. In experiments conducted with 4.0mm-thymidine, maximal incorporation of label took place during S phase or early G2 phase. Experiments with 1.0mm-thymidine revealed a significantly less marked periodicity of myeloma protein synthesis.
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PMID:Automatic monitoring of biochemical parameters in tissue culture. Studies on synchronously growing mouse myeloma cells. 467 19


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