Abstract

The effect of sulfuric acid esterification of Tyr-12 in gastrin-17 on immunoreactivity was evaluated by the ability of seventeen antisera raised against non-sulfated gastrin-17 to bind sulfated gastrins in extracts of gastrinoma and antral tissue. Using non-sulfated Tyr-12 iodinated gastrin as tracer, and non-sulfated gastrin-17 as standard the antisera showed three different patterns of reactivity: Three antisera (Nos. 2602, 2605 and 4562) bound sulfated gastrins with low (4–23%) potency; four antisera (Nos. 2604, 2720, 4710 and 4713) measured sulfated gastrins with a potency similar to that of non-sulfated gastrins (81–100% crossreactivity); whereas ten antisera (Nos. 2601, 2606, 2609, 2716, 2717, 2718, 4556, 4559, 4560 and 4563) displayed enhanced reactivity with sulfated gastrins (130–373% cross-reactivity). Using Gly-2 iodinated gastrin as tracer, the latter type of antisera reacted almost equally with sulfated and non-sulfated gastrins, suggesting that the apparent increase in binding of sulfated gastrins rather is due to increased displacement of Tyr-12 iodinated gastrin. The results show that derivatization of amino acid residues greatly influences antibody binding.

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