A human macrophage‐associated antigen (CD68) detected by six different monoclonal antibodies

K Micklem, E Rigney, J Cordell… - British journal of …, 1989 - Wiley Online Library
K Micklem, E Rigney, J Cordell, D Simmons, P Stross, H Turley, B Seed, D Mason
British journal of haematology, 1989Wiley Online Library
Antibodies grouped together by the Third Workshop on Leucocyte Differentiation Antigens
on the basis of pan‐macrophage reactivity on tissue sections were analysed in
immunoprecipitation experiments. Antibodies Y2/131. EBM11, Ki‐M6 and Ki‐M7 all
precipitated antigens of Mr 110000 which were shown to be identical by preclearing
experiments. In addition a recently produced antibody, KP1, which identifies macrophages
in paraffin‐embedded tissue, was shown to recognize the same antigen. The antibodies …
Summary
Antibodies grouped together by the Third Workshop on Leucocyte Differentiation Antigens on the basis of pan‐macrophage reactivity on tissue sections were analysed in immunoprecipitation experiments. Antibodies Y2/131. EBM11, Ki‐M6 and Ki‐M7 all precipitated antigens of Mr 110000 which were shown to be identical by preclearing experiments. In addition a recently produced antibody, KP1, which identifies macrophages in paraffin‐embedded tissue, was shown to recognize the same antigen. The antibodies were tested on murine cells transfected with two clones, which had been isolated by screening a cDNA library with antibodies Y1/82A and EBM11. Cells transfected with the longer cDNA clone, coding for a molecule of Mr 110000, reacted with antibodies Y2/131. EBM11. Y1/82A and Ki‐M6, whilst the shorter clone, encoding a molecule of Mr 70000 gave the same result except that it did not induce expression of the Ki‐M6 epitope. KP1 antibody did not recognize any transfectants, possibly because of differences in glycosylation by the transfected cell line compared with human tissue. Five of the six antibodies appear to recognize different epitopes (the sixth, Ki‐M7, not having been evaluated in this way). It was concluded that these six antibodies react with a macrophage‐associated antigen for which the gene has been cloned. This group of antibodies has recently been designated CD68 by the Fourth Workshop on Human Leucocyte Differentiation Antigens.
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