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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Production and characterization of N-terminally and C-terminally directed monoclonal antibodies against pancreatic glucagon.

Hybridoma technology has been successfully applied to the production of monoclonal antibodies against a variety of small soluble peptides. We report herein for the first time on the development of monoclonal antibodies to pancreatic glucagon. Twenty-three stable positive hybridomas were detected by radioimmunoassay from five separate fusions and cloned by the limiting dilution method. Four selected monoclonal antibodies were all of the IgG 2a subclass type kappa and bound to protein A. One monoclonal antibody (23.8B6) was shown to be directed toward the C-terminal region and another (23.6B4) toward the N-terminal to central region of the glucagon molecule. These antibodies did not cross-react with any of the other peptides tested. Two further monoclonal antibodies (23.4A1, 22.3A6) reacted with the C-terminal third of the glucagon molecule and showed a cross-reaction with the structurally related gastric inhibitory polypeptide of 0.7% and 9.1%, respectively. All but the C-terminal monoclonal antibody 23.8B6 showed a marked cross-reaction with ileal extracts. The N-terminally directed monoclonal antibody 23.6B4 was of sufficient avidity for use in the radioimmunoassay of pancreatic glucagon and gut glucagon-like immunoreactivity in tissue extracts, being sensitive to changes of pancreatic glucagon of 2.0 fmol/tube at a final titer of culture supernatant of 1:1.4 X 10(5). In gel permeation chromatography of intestinal extracts, two major peaks were detectable (Kav 0.27 and 0.54). The present findings show that monoclonal antibodies provide sensitive tools for detecting pancreatic glucagon and gut glucagon-like immunoreactivity. They will be valuable immunoreactants for the development of immunoradiometric assays as well as for large-scale immunoaffinity purification of gut glucagon-like immunoreactivity.[1]

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