Abstract

In a previous study [Goshorn et al. (1991) J. biol. Chem. 266, 2134–2142], several mAb specific for the same region on different cytochromes c were shown to have similar H or L chains. To determine the effect of differences in individual chains on antigenic variant specificity in the present study, chimeric mAb were prepared by recombining the H and L chains of mAb having the same or a different cytochrome c specificity. The H and L chains of two mAb to the region around residue 60 on horse cytochrome c (1F5.D1 and 2E5.G10) were functionally interchangeable even though the H chain differed by 11 amino acid residues in the complementarity-determining regions (CDR) and 15 amino acids overall in the variable regions. The L chains only differed by four amino acid residues in the CDR (five residues overall). Neither the H nor L chain of a mAb binding the same region of rat cytochrome c (6H2.B4) was functionally interchangeable with the chains of the two horse cytochrome c-specific mAb. The L chain of this mAb is very different from the other L chains which were derived from a different V κ family, but the H chain is nearly as similar to the horse cytochrome c-specific H chains as they are to each other. Most of the differences occur in CDR3 and result from the use of a distinct D H segment. The results indicate that, in some cases, the specificity of a mAb for a particular variant of a protein Ag, at least in regard to the H chain, is determined by only a few amino acid differences. The differences in the sequences of the H chains of the three mAb in this study and in the structures of their specific Ag provide insight into a possible molecular basis for the specificity of these mAb.

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