Epitope Recognition in the Human–Pig Comparison Model on Fixed and Embedded Material

Author:

Scalia Carla Rossana12345,Gendusa Rossella12345,Basciu Maria12345,Riva Lorella12345,Tusa Lorenza12345,Musarò Antonella12345,Veronese Silvio12345,Formenti Angelo12345,D’Angelo Donatella12345,Ronzio Angela Gabriella12345,Cattoretti Giorgio12345,Bolognesi Maddalena Maria12345

Affiliation:

1. Azienda Ospedaliera San Gerardo, Monza, Italy (CRS, RG, LR, LT, AM, GC, MMB)

2. Dipartimento di Chirurgia e Medicina Traslazionale, Universitá degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, Monza Italy (MB, GC)

3. Struttura Complessa di Anatomia Patologica, Dipartimento di Medicina di Laboratorio, Azienda Ospedaliera Ospedale Niguarda Ca’ Granda, Milano Italy (SV)

4. Servizio di Igiene degli Alimenti di Origine Animale, Dipartimento Veterinario, Azienda Sanitaria Locale di Monza e Brianza, Desio, Italy (AF, DD)

5. Dipartimento di Prevenzione Veterinario, Distretto Veterinario 2 Legnano - Castano Primo, Azienda Sanitaria Locale Milano 1, Castano Primo, Italy (AGR)

Abstract

The conditions and the specificity by which an antibody binds to its target protein in routinely fixed and embedded tissues are unknown. Direct methods, such as staining in a knock-out animal or in vitro peptide scanning of the epitope, are costly and impractical. We aimed to elucidate antibody specificity and binding conditions using tissue staining and public genomic and immunological databases by comparing human and pig—the farmed mammal evolutionarily closest to humans besides apes. We used a database of 146 anti-human antibodies and found that antibodies tolerate partially conserved amino acid substitutions but not changes in target accessibility, as defined by epitope prediction algorithms. Some epitopes are sensitive to fixation and embedding in a species-specific fashion. We also find that half of the antibodies stain porcine tissue epitopes that have 60% to 100% similarity to human tissue at the amino acid sequence level. The reason why the remaining antibodies fail to stain the tissues remains elusive. Because of its similarity with the human, pig tissue offers a convenient tissue for quality control in immunohistochemistry, within and across laboratories, and an interesting model to investigate antibody specificity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Histology,Anatomy

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