Amylin is a 37-amino-acid polypeptide synthesized in and secreted from pancreatic beta cells along with insulin. Its biological actions include the slowing and reduction of postmeal increases in plasma glucose concentrations. Studies of the basic amylin biology in humans have been hampered by the lack of a rapid, sensitive assay capable of measuring physiological concentrations of amylin in small volumes of plasma. We report here two sandwich-type immunoassays that use pairs of monoclonal antibodies, the fluorescent substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate, and the enzyme alkaline phosphatase. The minimum detectable concentration of amylin in 50 microL of plasma was 0.5 to 2 pmol/L, and the dynamic range was 2 to 100 pmol/L. The assays had average intraassay CVs of <10%, average interassay CVs of <15%, and good linearity on dilution and recovery of added amylin. The two assays use the same detection antibody, which binds to the carboxyl terminus of the molecule, but different capture antibodies. One of the assays measures only human amylin; the other also detects amylin-like peptides. Examples of measurements in human plasma are provided in subjects with impaired glucose tolerance and in nondiabetic controls.
Highly selective monoclonal antibodies to the peptide hormone human amylin have been produced and characterized. These antibodies are produced by hybridomas resulting from the fusions of BALB/c-derived myelomas and splenocytes from either inbred or outbred mouse strains. Certain of these antibodies recognize epitopes at the amino-terminus or the amidated carboxy-terminus, as well as conformational epitopes within the central region of the 37 amino acid peptide. Several of these antibodies show less than 0.1% cross-reactivity with related peptide hormones such as calcitonin and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and have apparent affinities in the low nanomolar range. Antibody pairs were selected for use in two-site assays for the direct measurement of endogenous amylin and the synthetic human amylin analogue, pramlintide (25, 28, 29 tripro-human amylin), which is presently under clinical investigation for improving glucose control in patients with both Type I and Type II diabetes treated with insulin.
A mouse/human chimeric antibody has been constructed by using variable light and variable heavy regions from a murine hybridoma specific for human carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) (CEM231.6.7). These V regions were combined with kappa and gamma-1 constant region genes cloned from human lymphocytes. The chimeric constructs were sequentially electroporated into murine non-Ig-producing myeloma (P3.653) and hybridoma (SP2/0) cell. Significant differences were seen in expression levels between the two cell types. High levels of expression (24 to 32 micrograms/ml/10(6) cells) were seen with several of the anti-CEA SP2/0 transfectomas but not with the P3.653 cells. The SP2/0 transfectoma lines were adapted to serum-free, chemically defined media and grown in large scale fermentation cultures where they continued to secrete high levels of antibody. The chimeric antibodies remain reactive against human CEA with affinity constants comparable to that of the parental hybridoma antibody. High level expression will make practical the production of chimeric antibodies for in vivo therapeutic and diagnostic purposes.
A simple method is described for the generation of a biologically produced mouse/human chimeric hetero-bifunctional antibody that has dual specificity for human carcinoembryonic Ag and metal chelate haptens. Two large compound chimeric vectors each containing the genetic information to produce a single antibody specificity were sequentially electroporated into the murine nonsecreting hybridoma SP2/0. This led to the isolation of a clone expressing high levels of total IgG (up to 25 micrograms/ml/10(6) cells), 10 to 20% of which showed simultaneous reactivity with both Ag. Binding studies showed that the immunoreactivities and affinity constants for the individual arms of the bifunctional antibody were equivalent to those seen with the parental antibodies.
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