Abstract

The tumour-associated epitope recognised by monoclonal antibody (MAb) 4D3 is expressed on a high m.w. mucin glycoprotein preparation known as small intestinal mucin antigen (SIMA). This epitope is detected in tissue from a high proportion of patients with colorectal cancer, and elevated levels occur in serum from a significant number of such patients, highlighting the potential clinical utility of MAb 4D3. In the present study, insight into the composition and structure of the carbohydrate epitope recognised by MAb 4D3 was gained following characterisation of 2 glycopeptides that co-purified with SIMA. Sequence analysis of 1 of these glycopeptides revealed that it was identical to the glycoprotein alpha-1-anti-chymotrypsin. This glycoprotein was subsequently deglycosylated to yield 5 forms corresponding to alpha-1-anti-chymotrypsin substituted with 4, 3, 2, 1 or no branched glycans. MAb 4D3 was reactive with each of the glycosylated forms, including the form carrying only 1 branched glycan, but did not react with fully deglycosylated alpha-1-anti-chymotrypsin. MAb 4D3 also reacted to different extents with ovine, bovine or porcine submaxillary mucins, each of which has a different amount of the O-linked sialylated disaccharide known as sialosyl Tn. Of these mucins, MAb 4D3 was most reactive with ovine submaxillary mucin, in which almost all of the carbohydrate chains are sialosyl Tn. Reactivity of MAb 4D3 towards isolated glycans, sialosyl Tn and related structures led to the conclusion that the preferred MAb 4D3 epitope involves the sialylated N-acetyl galactosamine disaccharide as well as an additional monosaccharide present on a neighbouring carbohydrate chain. Although the preferred epitope recognised by MAb 4D3 involves this sialylated disaccharide, the specificity of MAb 4D3 was different from that of other MAbs with a reported specificity for sialosyl Tn.

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