Abstract

A mouse anti-cholera toxin (CT) MoAb, mAb1, specific for the GM1-binding epitope of CT, was used to raise a syngenic anti-idiotypic MoAb, mAb2. Purified mAb2 was specific for mAb1 as shown by latex particle counting immunoassay and ELISA. Several experiments of competition between mAb2 and CT for binding to mAb1 demonstrated that mAb2 bore an internal image of the GM1-binding epitope of CT. Binding of mAb2 to GM1 unambiguously corroborated the mAb1-paratopic specificity of mAb2. Furthermore, mAb2 acted as a CT-surrogate antigen: rabbits injected with mAb2 produced some anti-CT antibodies, Ab3, which resembled mAb1 in specificity as expected. The potential use of this mAb2 as vaccine or as prophylactic agent to prevent CT from binding to its cellular receptor is discussed.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call