Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition , doi: 10.1002/anie.200602048 Nr. 32/2006 Anthrax Detector DevelopedMonoclonal antibody recognizes a specific sugar on the surface of anthrax bacteria sporesContact: Peter Seeberger, ETH Zürich (Switzerland) Registered journalists may download the original article here: Anti-Carbohydrate Antibodies for the Detection of Anthrax Spores Spores of the dreaded Bacillus anthracis have
already been used as a bioweapon against the civilian population. Once
inhaled, the anthrax pathogen almost always leads to death if the
victims are not treated within 24 to 48 hours. Rapid and accurate
diagnosis is thus vital. A team from the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (ETH) in Zürich, the Swiss Tropical Institute, and the University
of Bern has now developed a new immunological approach that can be used
to specifically recognize anthrax spores.
A number of tests for the diagnosis of anthrax
already exist, including some highly accurate but also extremely
complex, time-consuming, and expensive genetic methods. In contrast,
immunological tests are very simple; however, it has not yet been
possible to develop a truly reliable immunoassay. The similarity of the
anthrax spore surface to the spores of other bacteria that commonly
occur in humans has been a major problem: previous anthrax antibodies
were not sufficiently specific.
Some time ago, a special carbohydrate consisting of
four sugar components was discovered on the surface of anthrax spores.
This carbohydrate contains a sugar component that occurs nowhere else
and has been named anthrose. Peter H. Seeberger and his team targeted
this carbohydrate as their point of attack.
In order to produce antibodies against a molecule,
one first needs a large enough amount of the molecule in question, or
antigen. However, it is exceptionally difficult to isolate a
carbohydrate bound to the surface of a cell in its pure form. Seeberger
and his team thus chose an alternative route: they synthesized the
carbohydrate in the laboratory, attached it to a special “carrier”
protein and injected this compound into mice. The carrier protein
stimulated an immunological reaction, which is normally rather weak for
carbohydrate antigens. The researchers were then able to obtain monoclonal
antibodies from these immunized mice. These antibodies were found to
bind very specifically to anthrax spores; in contrast, they do not react
to bacteria closely related to Bacillus anthracis. “Our results
demonstrate that small differences in the carbohydrates on cell surfaces
can be used to obtain specific immune reagents,” says Seeberger. “Our
new antibodies will be used as the basis for highly sensitive anthrax
diagnosis and will contribute to the development of new therapeutic
approaches.”
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