Antibodies are produced by the immune system as a defense against foreign proteins due to their ability to bind with these molecules with a high degree of specificity. The highly specific nature of antibody/antigen interaction has made them of great use in a variety of applications that identify the presence of the protein antigen, including western blotting and immunohistochemistry. Zebrafish (Danio rerio) is a versatile model genetic organism that has been pivotal for numerous studies of vertebrate physiology. Historically, there were very few antibodies developed specifically against zebrafish proteins. Therefore, many studies used antibodies against human protein homologs to identify zebrafish proteins. However, the evolutionary ancestor of zebrafish experienced a whole genome duplication event. As a result, the zebrafish genome expresses several paralogs of many genes that have only a single homolog in most other vertebrates. This presents an interesting problem: can the antibodies raised against human proteins be relied upon to identify and discriminate between the different paralogs of zebrafish genes? To test the epitope conservation between human and zebrafish homologs, we tested a commercial antibody against the human melatonin receptor protein 1 (MTNR) for cross‐reactivity with putative zebrafish epitopes. Zebrafish express six paralogs of this protein: Mtnr1Aa, Mtnr1Ab, Mtnr1A‐like, Mtnr1Ba, Mtnr1Bb, and Mtnr1C. The putative epitope binding regions of these proteins display a variety of evolutionary conservation. These peptide sequences were cloned into a bacterial expression vector between an N‐terminal SUMO solubility tag and a C‐terminal 6xHis affinity purification tag. Following expression in Rosetta (DE3) E. coli, the fusion proteins were purified via nickel affinity column. Western blotting was carried out with anti‐His and anti‐human MTNR1 probes.The zebrafish Mtnr1A subtype demonstrated cross‐reactivity with anti‐human MTNR1, In contrast, the Mtrn1B and Mtnr1C subtypes were not recognized at all. Interestingly, the Mtnr1C protein contains only conservative differences in amino acid sequence from the human MTNR1. These data conclusively show that the proteins being detected in immunohistochemical assays with this antibody are of the Mtrn1A subtype. Additionally, this project demonstrates the importance of validating antibody specificity through experimental means to ensure that the protein(s) of interest is indeed being detected.Support or Funding InformationNational Science Foundation (DBI‐0821252)
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