• Title/Summary/Keyword: Anti-JL-1 antibody

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Radiolabeling and Immunological Characteristics of In-house Anti-Leukemic Monoclonal Antibodies(Anti-CALLA, Anti-JL-1 Antibodies) (국산 항 백혈병 항체(항 CALLA, 항 JL-1)의 동위원소 표지 및 면역학적 특성에 관한 연구)

  • So, Young;Chung, June-Key;Jeong, Jae-Min;Lee, Dong-Soo;Lee, Myung-Chul;Koh, Chang-Soon;Park, Seong-Hoe
    • The Korean Journal of Nuclear Medicine
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    • v.29 no.1
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    • pp.98-104
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    • 1995
  • Recently murine monoclonal antibodies have been studied actively for radioimmuno-scintigraphy and radioimmunotherapy, especially on patients with leukemia and lymphoma. In this research, we studied radiolabeling and immunologic characteristics of two in-house anti-leukemic monoclonal antibodies(anti-CALLA & anti-JL-1 antibodies) to make the basis for their clinical application. Each antibody was radiolabeled successfully with $^{99m}Tc$ by pretargeting transchelation method and with $^{125}I$ by lodogen method. We also studied cell binding assay, Scatchard analysis and modulation phenomenon. $^{125}I$ showed 90% labeling efficiency for each anti-body which was satisfactory, but $^{99m}Tc$ showed labeling efficiency below 70%, for which we need better labeling method. In cell binding assay, the immunoreactivity(IR) was low for $^{99m}Tc$-labeled antibodies. Scatchard analysis showed satisfactory data for both binding affinity. The affinity constant and antibody binding sites per cell are around $10^9M^{-1}$ and $10^4$, respectively. There was no modulation phenomenon in cases of $^{125}I$ or $^{99m}Tc$ labeled antibodies. We expect that two anti-leukemic monoclonal antibodies may be useful in diagnosis and therapy for leukemia and lymphoma patients.

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Immature thymocyte antigen, JL1, as a possible immunodiagnostic and immunotherapeutic target for leukemia

  • Shin, Young Kee;Choi, Eun Young;Kim, Seok Hyung;Park, Seong Hoe
    • IMMUNE NETWORK
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.1-6
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    • 2001
  • The identification of tumor-specific antigens has represented a critical milestone in cancer diagnosis and therapy. Clinical research in this area for leukemia has also been driven over the past few decades by the hope that surface antigens with restricted tissue expression would be identified. Disappointingly, only a small number of the leukemic antigens identified to date, meet sufficient criteria to be considered viable immunophenotypic markers. In this paper, we nominate anti-JL1 monoclonal antibody as an immunodiagnostic and immunotherapeutic candidate for leukemia. The JL1 molecule appears to be a novel cell surface antigen, which is strictly confined to a subpopulation of limited stages during the hematopoietic differentiation process. Despite the restricted distribution of the JL1 antigen in normal tissues and cells, anti-JL1 monoclonal antibody specifically recognizes various types of leukemia, irrespective of immunophenotypes. On the basis of these findings, we propose JL1 antigen as a tumor-specific marker, which shows promise as a candidate molecule for diagnosis and immunotherapy in leukemia, and one that spares normal bone marrow stem cells.

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