Antigens, by their nature as macromolecules having primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures, constitute a “mosaic” of antigenic determinants. An outgrowth of basic serologic principles and techniques has been the attempt to “purify” antigens to reduce the heterogeneity of antibodies developed against them. Antigen molecules with only a single epitope are rarely encountered; rather, hundreds or even thousands of potential antigenic determinants may exist on a cell surface or within the mix of other substances. When these mixed antigens are injected into an animal, an equal number of lymphocyte clones are stimulated. Even though each clone produces a specific antibody, the final result is a highly heterogeneous mixture of antibody molecules, the specificity and affinity of which are often unknown and difficult to control from batch to batch. When these polyclonal antisera are used in immunologic test systems involving infectious agents, cross-reactivity may be noted either because antigenic determinants are shared by different species or because mutations may have led to the evolution of epitopes sufficiently close in specificity to produce detectable cross-reactions. Attempts to produce pure antibodies through absorption with cross-reacting antigens or to prepare “clonal” from “polyclonal” antisera via techniques such as affinity column chromatography have only been partially successful.
As the science of serologic testing
evolved, the view was held that the availability of an antibody having a high
degree of molecular homogeneity and with specificity for a single, antigenic
epitope without cross-reactivity would solve many of the problems encountered
in the use of polyclonal antibodies. Highly specific monoclonal antibodies, the
product of a single clone of lymphoid cells, gradually emerged as a by-product
of the investigations in cell fusion and hybridoma technology conducted by Kohler
and Milstein. Because of their discovery, it is now possible to isolate cloned
lines of individual lymphocytes that produce unique, monospecific antibody
molecules. Monoclonal antibodies refer to a uniform, homogeneous, molecular
species of Ig, rather than to a heterogeneous array of Igs as is produced
during the usual immune response. The principal feature of this technology was
not that a single line of monoclonal antibody (MAB)-producing cells could be
isolated, but rather that these mouse lymphocytes could be “fused” with mouse
myeloma cells to produce hybrid cells having two inherent properties: (1) the
capability of producing monospecific antibodies (acquired from the parent lymphocytes)
and (2) the ability to grow permanently in culture (the characteristic
“immortality” acquired from the transformed myeloma cells). Thus, individual
monoclonal antibodies can be produced in a continuous and almost endless supply.
Monoclonal antibodies have been
developed against clinically relevant antigens of many bacterial, viral,
fungal, and parasitic agents, and reagents prepared with these antibodies are
used in many commercially available EIA and immunofluorescence test kits. In
addition to the direct detection of microbial structural antigens (e.g.,
capsular polysaccharides, outer membrane protein antigens), monoclonal
antibodies have also been developed for the detection of microbial virulence
factors, such as toxins produced by enterohemorrhagic E. coli (e.g., Shiga and
Shiga-like toxins). This approach introduces a new way of evaluating the
relationship of microorganisms and infectious diseases. Instead of the
conventional focus on detection and identification of the organisms themselves,
these reagents allow specific detection of microbial virulence factors that may
be shared by several bacterial species associated with a given symptom complex.
For example, it may be more important to know that an enteric toxin is the
cause of hyperosmotic diarrhoea, rather than to receive the information that
the patient is infected with Shigella species or an enterotoxigenic E. coli
strain.
Procedure
for Production of Monoclonal Antibodies.
1. Selection of Antigen
Monoclonal antibodies can be produced
against any substance recognized as an antigen by the immune system of the
animal being injected. Using a pure antigen is ideal. In fact, certain antigens,
such as chemically purified drugs used for assays (e.g., digoxin), may be homogeneous.
Even so, one can never guarantee that an antigenic determinant will consist of only
one epitope. The fact that impure antigens can be used in MAB production is a
chief advantage over conventional methods used to produce polyclonal antibodies.
2. Animal Immunization
The chief objectives in the immunization
procedure are to prime the immune system of the animal to avidly recognize all
antigens injected, to maximally stimulate B-lymphocyte clones, and to have the
spleen cells divide at a high rate. In the production of monoclonal antibodies,
the BALB/c mouse strain is most commonly used. The antigen is injected
subcutaneously or intraperitoneally, with the simultaneous injection of
Freund’s adjuvant. Injections are repeated at weekly intervals, and a final
“booster” injection is given intravenously approximately 3 days prior to
harvesting the spleen cells. At the end of the injection schedule, the animal
is killed and the spleen is aseptically removed.
3. Fusion of Splenic Lymphocytes and
Myeloma Cells
The animal spleen is placed in sterile
culture medium containing antibiotics. The splenic tissue is teased to release
cells and to form a slurry. This material is passed through a mesh to obtain single
cells. Ficoll is added, and the slurry is centrifuged to remove RBCs.
Polyethylene glycol (PEG) is added to the slurry to reduce cell-to-cell surface
tension; this brings the cells into close proximity to one another, allowing
their membranes to fuse. Dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) is added to the fusion
mixture to maximize cell contact even more. Finally, the cells are packed into
a pellet by gently centrifuging the mixture for 5 minutes. Thus, at the end of
these steps, the preparation consists of unfused myeloma cells, unfused
lymphocytes, and a few fused hybrid lymphocyte-myeloma cells (It should be
recognized that splenic lymphocytes and myeloma cells fuse with a frequency of
only about 1 per 105 or 106 cells.).
4. Selection of Hybrid
Lymphocyte-Myeloma Cells
Unfused myeloma cells rapidly outgrow
the hybrids and must be removed in some manner. The myeloma cells used for
fusion are grown in the presence of 8-azaguanine, a drug that causes the cells
to permanently switch off the production of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl
transferase (HPRT), an enzyme that is needed to continue growth. If these
HPRT-negative cells are suspended in a medium containing hypoxanthine,
aminopterin, and thymidine (HAT medium), only the hybridoma cells will grow
successfully. The hybridoma cells inherit HRPT from the splenic lymphocytes
with which they have fused and will survive. The unfused myeloma cells, unable
to synthesize DNA because of inability to produce HPRT, will be killed by the aminopterin
in the selective HAT medium. It should also be remembered that unfused splenic lymphocytes
do not survive beyond a few days in culture medium; therefore, the fused hybrid
lymphocyte-myeloma cells alone survive in the HAT medium.
5. Cloning the Hybridoma Cells
The single hybrid cells producing the
desired antibody must be isolated and grown as a clone. Two techniques can be
used: (1) limiting dilution and (2) growth in an agar gel medium. In the limiting
or doubling dilution technique, the suspension of hybrids (after maximum
growth) is diluted and distributed into a series of sterile wells in a
microtiter plate. The dilutions are so calculated that each well contains an
average of only one cell that can then be replaced as a single
antibody-producing clone. In the alternative method, using agarose gel
supplemented with serum, amino acids, and antibiotics, the dividing hybrid
cells form tiny, sphere-like clusters. These spheres can be selected with a
Pasteur pipette and transferred to microtube wells for further culture and
ultimately for assay to determine whether the desired antibody is being
produced.
6. Screening for Desired Antibodies
In the fusion step of the procedure of
producing monoclonal antibodies, many lymphocytes other than those producing
the desired monoclonal antibodies may have fused. In fact, less than 5% of the
hybrid cells out of those selected actually produce the desired specific
antibodies. Thus, assays of the selected cell lines are required to determine if
the desired antibody is being produced. Radioimmunoassays, enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay (ELISA), precipitin techniques, and blotting techniques can
be used for this phase of the procedure.
7. Mass Production of Monoclonal
Antibodies
Once the desired clone of hybrid cells
has been selected, the next step is the production of large quantities of
monoclonal antibodies. The peritoneal cavity of mice, preferably the same
strain that was used for the initial immunization step, can be used to grow the
selected hybrid cell clone. First, the peritoneal cavity is injected with an
organic irritant, such as pristane, to produce a chemical peritonitis. Next,
the selected hybrid cell line is injected into the peritoneal cavity. Within
days, a tumor known as a hybridoma develops. This tumor produces large quantities
of monoclonal antibodies that can be harvested by aspirating the ascitic fluid
from the mouse’s peritoneal cavity. A tumor-bearing mouse will survive for 4 to
6 weeks, during which time large quantities of antibody can be harvested.
Hybridomas can also be grown in tissue cultures in which highly purified
antibodies are produced without the potential for contamination from serum,
nonspecific interference from ascites proteins, or cross-reactivity of histoincompatibility
antibodies derived from the mouse tissues.
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