Yamashita T, Imai K, Saito N, Yachi A
Department of Internal Medicine, Section I, Sapporo Medical College, Japan.
Brain Res. 1988 Dec 6;474(2):309-15. doi: 10.1016/0006-8993(88)90444-1.
We have established a monoclonal antibody (MoAb) AM34 (IgG1) which was prepared by a hybridoma constructed from fusion between murine myeloma cells and murine splenocytes. Crude amyloid proteins which were used as immunogen, were extracted from the kidney of a patient with rheumatoid arthritis by the distilled water method. This antibody strongly reacted with all 8 cases of secondary amyloidosis, but did not react or very weakly reacted with 17 tissue sections of primary or myeloma-associated amyloidosis. Other amyloid tissues did not give any positive reaction. Interestingly, 6 brain tissues of Alzheimer's disease clearly showed positive staining with this antibody, whereas two apparently normal brain tissues exhibited negative staining. Senile plaque cores, neurofibrillary tangles (weakly stained) and cerebrovascular amyloid in Alzheimer's disease were stained. Absorption of the MoAb AM34 with the crude amyloid proteins abolished the immunoreactivity of the MoAb AM34 not only with the kidney tissue section of the secondary amyloidosis, but also with the above mentioned portions of the brain in the case of Alzheimer's disease. Therefore, these immunohistological data suggest that the MoAb AM34 recognizes common epitope which exists in amyloid deposits of both secondary amyloidosis and Alzheimer's disease. An inhibition test on the kidney section showed that the reactivity of MoAb AM34 was not at all inhibited by the pretreatment of the section with 10 times higher concentration of anti-human amyloid A (AA) MoAb KM268 which was prepared against synthetic peptides of AA protein, suggesting that MoAb AM34 might react with amyloid-related protein other than AA protein. In addition, MoAb KM268 did not react with any lesions in Alzheimer's disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)