Abstract

In order to determine how the site on the molecule used for conjugation influences the specificty of the resulting antiserum, progesterone was conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) through substituents on the A(C3), B(C6), C(C11), and D(C20) rings for use as a hapten to elicit antibody formation in rabbits. Specificty of the antisera was determined by testing the ability of 24 representative steroids to displace radioactive progesterone in a radioimmunoassay procedure. Progesterone-tyrosine methyl ester (TME) conjugates were radioiodinated and used as the radioactive form of the hormone and radioactivity bound to antibody was separated from free radioactivity by a double antibody procedure. Immunization with progesterone conjugated at C20 resulted in the formation of antibodies which could not distinguish between progesterone and other Δ 4-3-ketosteroids with structures similar in the A, B, and C ring (namely 17-hydroxyprogesterone, 20α and 20β-hydroxy-4-pregnen-20-one, deoxycorticosterne and testosterone). Immunization with progesterone-3-BSA resulted in the formation of antisera which were fairly specific for progesterone while immunization with progesterone conjugated at the 11 or 6 positions resulted in antisera which were very specific for progesterone. It was concluded that steroid hormones should be conjugated to protein at sites on the B or C ring of the molecule for the production of specific antisera.

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