Premium
Production of monoclonal antibodies to Tomato leaf curl Bangalore virus
Author(s) -
DEVARAJA By,
GANGATIRKAR PRADNYA,
SUNITHA S N,
NARAYANASWAMY KIRTHI,
KARANDE ANJALI,
MUNIYAPPA V,
SAVITHRI H S
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.2004.tb00348.x
Subject(s) - biology , nicotiana benthamiana , monoclonal antibody , virology , recombinant dna , virus , fusion protein , plant virus , escherichia coli , nicotiana , antibody , leaf curl , microbiology and biotechnology , solanaceae , biochemistry , gene , immunology
Summary Purified Tomato leaf curl Bangalore virus (ToLCBV) was injected into mice and the splenocytes were used for establishing hybridoma lines. Initial screening of culture supernatants showed that 13 lines produced antibody, and after further screening four produced functional monoclonal antibodies. Upon characterisation, these were found to be of low affinity, probably due to host protein contamination and poor yield of native virus in the original preparations. In order to circumvent these problems, the coat protein of ToLCBV was over‐expressed in Escherichia coli . Fusion experiments using recombinant coat protein as antigen yielded two primary hybridoma clones G 11 and E4 that exhibited good affinity of binding to the antigen. Sub‐cloning yielded four monoclonal antibodies G 11 E 7 E 7 , G 11 E 7 G 12 , E 4 E 2 and E 4 G 6 . G 11 E 7 E 7 and G 11 E 7 G 12 successfully detected ToLCBV in infected leaf extracts of tomato and Nicotiana benthamiana , viruliferous whiteflies and weed samples. These monoclonal antibodies could also detect other type III geminiviruses such as Pumpkin yellow vein mosaic virus and Bhendi yellow vein mosaic virus . Thus these monoclonal antibodies can be used for testing field‐collected samples.