TY - JOUR
T1 - Reproducible production of antiserum against vertebrate calmodulin and determination of the immunoreactive site.
AU - Van Eldik, L. J.
AU - Watterson, D. M.
N1 - Copyright:
Medline is the source for the citation and abstract of this record.
PY - 1981/5/10
Y1 - 1981/5/10
N2 - Calmodulin is a small, acidic, calcium-binding protein that exhibits multiple in vitro biochemical activities. Although calmodulin has no known enzymatic activity, it stimulates several enzyme activities in calcium-dependent manner. Because of its ubiquitous distribution and highly conserved structure, it has been difficult to elicit anti-calmodulin sera of useful titer. We describe here a reproducible and rapid method for producing anti-calmodulin sera. This method requires the injection of performic acid-oxidized calmodulin, but the antisera react equally well with unoxidized calmodulin. A response was elicited in 11 out of 11 rabbits using three variations of this method. Antisera titers were high enough to enable development of a quantitative radioimmunoassay using dilutions of whole sera, immunoglobulin fractions, or immunoglobulin fractions purified on calmodulin-Sepharose conjugates. For the majority of the antisera, the immunoreactive site is contained in a unique region of the calmodulin molecule. Based on the quantitative reactivity of overlapping tryptic and cyanogen bromide peptides, we propose that a major immunoreactive site is fund within an 18-residue region in the COOH-terminal domain of calmodulin.
AB - Calmodulin is a small, acidic, calcium-binding protein that exhibits multiple in vitro biochemical activities. Although calmodulin has no known enzymatic activity, it stimulates several enzyme activities in calcium-dependent manner. Because of its ubiquitous distribution and highly conserved structure, it has been difficult to elicit anti-calmodulin sera of useful titer. We describe here a reproducible and rapid method for producing anti-calmodulin sera. This method requires the injection of performic acid-oxidized calmodulin, but the antisera react equally well with unoxidized calmodulin. A response was elicited in 11 out of 11 rabbits using three variations of this method. Antisera titers were high enough to enable development of a quantitative radioimmunoassay using dilutions of whole sera, immunoglobulin fractions, or immunoglobulin fractions purified on calmodulin-Sepharose conjugates. For the majority of the antisera, the immunoreactive site is contained in a unique region of the calmodulin molecule. Based on the quantitative reactivity of overlapping tryptic and cyanogen bromide peptides, we propose that a major immunoreactive site is fund within an 18-residue region in the COOH-terminal domain of calmodulin.
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M3 - Article
C2 - 6163780
AN - SCOPUS:0019876862
SN - 0021-9258
VL - 256
SP - 4205
EP - 4210
JO - Journal of Biological Chemistry
JF - Journal of Biological Chemistry
IS - 9
ER -