Characterization of the Epitope Recognized by a Monoclonal Antibody Directed against the Largest Subunit of Drosophila RNA Polymerase II

The epitope recognized by monoclonal antibody MAb215 generated previously against Drosophila melanogaster RNA polymerase II was mapped to amino acid residues 806-820 of the largest, 215 kDa, subunit located in a region conserved within the largest subunits of pro- and eukaryotic RNA polymerases. The...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBiological Chemistry Hoppe-Seyler Vol. 376; no. 8; pp. 473 - 482
Main Authors Kontermann, Roland E., Liu, Zhihong, Schulze, Rüdiger A., Sommer, Kai A., Queitsch, Iris, Dübel, Stefan, Kipriyanov, Sergey M., Breitling, Frank, Bautz, Ekkehard K.F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Berlin, New York Walter de Gruyter, Berlin / New York 01.08.1995
De Gruyter
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The epitope recognized by monoclonal antibody MAb215 generated previously against Drosophila melanogaster RNA polymerase II was mapped to amino acid residues 806-820 of the largest, 215 kDa, subunit located in a region conserved within the largest subunits of pro- and eukaryotic RNA polymerases. The affinities of MAb215 and of a recombinant single-chain Fv fragment (scFv215) were determined for binding to the enzyme as well as the fusion protein and synthetic peptides used for epitope mapping. In addition, amino acid residues of the epitope important for binding to MAb215 were identified using peptides carrying single amino acid substitutions. The epitope is not involved in the polymerization reaction or the DNA unwinding process since no inhibitory effects of the monoclonal antibody were observed in nonspecific in vitro transcription using denatured calf thymus DNA or double stranded oligo dC-tailed T7 DNA as template. In contrast, MAb215 inhibits accurate in vitro transcription from the Krüppel gene promoter and from the adenovirus-2 major late promoter. Preincubation of template DNA with the nuclear extract had no effects on inhibition supporting the notion that the epitope does not participate directly in the formation of preinitiation complexes. The same inhibitory effects were observed using scFv215. The results provide further evidence that recombinant antibody fragments produced in Escherichia coli possess the same specificity and similar affinity as their parental antibodies and demonstrate that scFv fragments are useful tools for analysis of transcriptional processes.
Bibliography:ArticleID:bchm3.1995.376.8.473
istex:94D9C34A9F58732681D62F8997CE2CD3D9441EC2
bchm3.1995.376.8.473.pdf
ark:/67375/QT4-14JX0CMR-M
ISSN:0177-3593
1437-4315
DOI:10.1515/bchm3.1995.376.8.473