Title: Antibodies and Immunotherapy
1Antibodies and Immunotherapy
2Medical Therapies
- Antibiotics
- Recombinant Medicines
- Immunotherapy
- Somatic Gene Therapy
- Germ-Line Therapy
3The Immune Response
- The immune response is the series of cellular and
humoral (blood) changes that occur in an animal
to deal with an invasion by foreign organisms or
substances that are potentially harmful to the
body, or to deal with altered host cells.
4From http//www.healthscout.com/ency/1/ImagePage
s/8932.html
5Immune Response Involves
- Cell mediated immunity.
- T-cells produced by stem cells in the bone marrow
that function as helper cells (TH), killer cells
(CTL), or down regulates other cells (TS). - Humoral (blood) immunity.
- Lymphoid tissues
- Primary
- Thymus T-cell maturation.
- Bone marrow B-cell maturation.
- Secondary
- Lymph nodes Harbors both T-cells (internal) and
B-cells (cortex). - Spleen similar to lymph nodes.
6http//www.healthscout.com/ency/1/ImagePages/9478.
html
7Antibodies
- Antibodies are proteins called immunoglobulins.
They are produced by the immune system of
vertebrates in response to foreign substances
that might be a threat to the body such as
chemicals, viruses, fungi, toxins, etc.
Substances that elicit the immune response are
called antigens.
8Antigens
- Antigens are molecules that elicits a specific
immune response in an animal. - Antigens are
- Usually large molecules, greater than 10,000
Daltons in molecular weight. - Structurally complex, i.e., proteins.
- Accessible to the immune system.
- Foreign (not recognized as self).
9Antibodies
- Each antibody uniquely binds to a specific
antigen. - Two identical heavy and light chains.
10Ribbon image of an IgG molecule. From
http//www.antibodyresource.com/gallery.html
11How Are Antibodies Produced
- Inoculate animal
- Wait
- Inoculate animal again
- Bleed, check titer
- Collect immune sera
- Remove red blood cells
- Purify antibodies
12(No Transcript)
13Memory Response
From http//www.cehs.siu.edu/fix/medmicro/genimm
.htm
14Antibody Categories
- Polyclonal antibodies are a mixture of
immunoglobulin molecules, produced in animals,
secreted against a specific antigen, each
recognizing a specific epitope. - Monoclonal antibodies are immunoglobulin
molecules that are produced from hybridomas, that
are secreted, each recognizing a specific epitope.
15From http//cellbio.utmb.edu/cellbio/membrane_in
tro.htm
16From http//encarta.msn.com/media_461540240_7615
88811_-1_1/Producing_Monoclonal_Antibodies.html
17Hybridomas
- A cell that results from the chemical combination
of an antibody producing B cell with a myeloma
cell. - B-cell produces specific antibody.
- Myeloma cell, can live indefinitely and is an
antibody secreting cell.
18Use of Monoclonal Antibodies
- Diagnostic Tests.
- Home pregnancy kits target chorionic
gonadotropin. - HIV detect antibodies against HIV.
- Heart damage assessment.
- Detection of toxins, pathogens.
- Therapy
- Passive immunotherapy, payload delivery
- Active immunotherapy
19Serological Methods for Disease Detection
- Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay.
- Developed in the 1970s for virus detection.
- Eva Engvall, Peter Perlmann, Univ. of Stockholm.
- Components
- Immobile solid substrate.
- Antibody
- Antibody-enzyme conjugate
20Diagram of an ELISA Reaction
Antibody-Antigen specific attachment, excess and
non-specific antigen lost.
Substrate conversion
Add Antigen
Antibody2-Enzyme conjugate
S
S
Attachment of the antibody1 to a solid substrate
Add colorimetric substrate
Plastic (polystyrene) well
21ELISA
- Attachment of specific antibody
- Wash
- Add solution containing antigen
- Wash
- Add second antibody-enzyme (alkaline phosphatase
or horseradish peroxidase). - Wash
- Add substrate
- Stop reaction
22Monoclonal Therapies
- Naked monoclonal antibodies
- Binds directly to cancer cells making them
visible the immune system. - Bind to cancer cell receptors that trigger rapid
growth. - Conjugated monoclonal antibodies.
- Antibodies joined to a chemotherapy drug,
radioactive particle, or toxin.
23Monoclonal Therapies
- Pros
- Side effects less severe than standard
chemotherapy. - Cons
- Recognized as foreign, second dose less
effective. - May attach to the wrong thing.
- Attached groups may fall off.
- Effective for the short term, tumors may occur.
24Active Immunotherapy
- Active immunotherapy is the use of vaccines to
stimulate an immune response that directly
targets the tumor antigens. - Tumors are immunogenic.
- New and developing area.
- Types
- Peptide and protein vaccines.
- Tumor cell vaccines.
- Viral vectors and plasmid vaccines.
25Review
- What are antibodies?
- What prevents us from infections?
- What is a hybridoma?
- What is a monoclonal antibody?
- What is a polyclonal antibody?
- What is one biotechnological use of antibodies?