Shaw D C, Harris D L, He X M, Oster J A, Montgomery D L, Ely K R, Edmundson A B
Mol Immunol. 1987 Mar;24(3):267-74. doi: 10.1016/0161-5890(87)90145-3.
A method is described for the hybridization of immunoglobulin light chains (Bence-Jones proteins) from different patients. The interchain half-cystine residues in the light chains from one subject are converted into mixed disulfides with 2,2'-dithiodipyridine. In the Bence-Jones dimer from a second patient the interchain disulfide bond is reduced with dithiothreitol. A covalently linked hybrid molecule is produced by the reaction of the mixed disulfide with the reduced thiol. In favorable cases the mild treatment yields heterodimers which can be crystallized for X-ray diffraction studies. The procedure can also be employed for converting a monomer into a covalent dimer. The engineered dimer of one kappa chain (Jen) crystallizes in the same space group as an aggregate of monomers, but the unit cell is only one-third as large.