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National Academy of Sciences, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 9(83), p. 2989-2993, 1986

DOI: 10.1073/pnas.83.9.2989

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Epitope map and processing scheme for the 195,000-dalton surface glycoprotein of Plasmodium falciparum merozoites deduced from cloned overlapping segments of the gene.

Journal article published in 1986 by J. A. Lyon, R. H. Geller, J. D. Haynes, J. D. Chulay, J. L. Weber
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

DNA fragments from human malaria parasites were cloned into lambda gt11 to produce a genomic DNA expression library. A pool of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) recognizing three domains of the 195-kDa major merozoite surface glycoprotein (gp195) reacted with seven clones expressing malaria antigens. mAbs recognizing the 83-kDa product of gp195 reacted with the clones, but mAbs recognizing a glycosylated 45-kDa and a nonglycosylated 45-kDa domain did not. Restriction enzyme mapping revealed that the clones contained overlapping segments encoding about 70% of the gene beginning at the 5' end and ending at an EcoRI restriction enzyme site 3.3 kilobase pairs downstream. The mAbs recognizing the 83-kDa domain reacted differently with the clones, allowing the mapping of three epitopes, one of which was repetitive. Affinity-purified antibodies were selected from immune monkey serum with recombinant expression proteins adsorbed to nitrocellulose filters. When used to probe electrophoretic immunoblots of parasite extracts, these antigen-selected antibodies reacted with specific sets of processed products of gp195, including those associated with the 83- and the nonglycosylated 45-kDa domains. This information, combined with the mAb epitope map, allowed a tentative scheme for processing gp195 from the Camp strain to be proposed.