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Expanding the Immune Toolkit for Assessing Pig Health and Improving Swine Disease and Vaccine Studies

Objective

Swine disease and vaccine research has been advanced by the development of sophisticated tools to measure physiologic parameters associated with immunity, pathology, and disease prevention. Our goal for this National Pork Board (NPB) funded grant (#05-515) is to expand the immune toolkit for pigs, by developing and characterizing reagents that can be used to identify and quantify a major class of immune proteins, the immunoglobulins (Igs). <P>Swine produce antibodies in response to infection or vaccination but exactly which Ig classes, in particular IgG subclasses (IgG1 - IgG6) are involved in each function remains unknown for the lack of reagents. Researchers require such reagents to determine Ig function; diagnostic laboratories use them to measure Ig levels and specific antibody responses according to isotype. Currently most laboratories and investigators rely on polyclonal antisera that are tedious to prepare, lack immortality and vary between branches. <P>We propose to develop monoclonal antibody (mAb) reagents that uniquely recognize the various Ig isotypes and IgG subisotypes, or subclasses. To accomplish this we will first express all swine IgG subclass and minor isotype proteins in vitro. This is necesssary before we can perform our second objective, to characterize the reactivity of all currently available mAb anti-swine Ig. The expressed IG proteins can also be used for our third objective, to produce new mAb. <P>Our overall goal is to have a full panel of well-characterized mAb that react specifically with each swine Ig isotype and IgG subclass. The mAb reagents will refine swine disease diagnostic tests and enable scientists to more accurately compare results among laboratories. We expect that use of these mAb anti-swine Ig reagents will prove valuable in studies to reveal the functions of each swine iG isotype and subclass; thus opening up new understanding of disease control mechanisms and vaccine responses.

More information

Approach: In collaboration with the University of Iowa and Free University, Brussels, Belgium, we will 1) Express Ig proteins for each swine Ig isotype and IgG subclass gene. Prepare Ig proteins as standard references; 2) Characterize the reactivity of known anti-swine Ig mAb reagents with each gene product; and 3) Begin to develop new mAbs that are specific for each of the expressed Ig proteins. BL-1 exempt 9/14/04

Investigators
Lunney, Joan
Institution
USDA - Agricultural Research Service
Start date
2005
End date
2010
Project number
1265-32000-088-01R
Accession number
409559
Categories
Commodities