Production of a nef-specific monoclonal antibody by the use of a synthetic peptide.
De Santis. R R; Anastasi. A M AM; Marcolini. S S; Valesini. G G; Pezzella. M M; Vonesch. N N; Sturchio. E E; Mele. A A
Key Findings
- A 6‑amino‑acid peptide from HIV‑1 Nef shares high similarity to thymosin‑alpha‑1 and was chemically synthesized.
- The monoclonal antibody F14.11 (IgG2a/k) specifically binds this Nef peptide and can detect the natural Nef protein in several laboratory tests.
- F14.11 can identify Nef inside lymphocytes from people with silent HIV infection, suggesting a possible monitoring tool.
Practical Outcomes
- This study provides a research tool for detecting HIV Nef protein, but it offers no actionable protocols, dosage guidance, or health benefits for longevity, metabolism, or performance.
Summary
Scientists created a lab antibody that targets a tiny piece of the HIV protein Nef, which looks similar to the natural peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1, but the work is purely for research and doesn’t give any new health or performance advice.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibodies have been generated against a synthetic peptide of the nef protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in order to further characterize the biochemical and functional nature of this protein and its role in the control of HIV-1 transcriptional regulation. Earlier studies indicated nef to be a negative regulatory factor for viral transcription, whereas more recent studies report evidence against this original hypothesis. Nef is a protein of 206 amino acids of approximately 27 kD in most HIV-1 isolates; however, in some other isolates a truncated form of 124 amino acids has been described. A peptide sequence of six amino acids, corresponding to a region of the nef protein exhibiting high-sequence homology to thymosin alpha 1 protein, has been synthesized by Merrifield solid-phase methodology. This peptide is coded by a sequence located upstream to the stop codon described in some HIV-1 isolates and then is maintained in both complete and truncated forms of the nef protein. F14.11 is a nef peptide-specific monoclonal antibody (IgG2a/k) exhibiting the ability to recognize natural nef protein in either radioimmunoassay, radioimmunoprecipitation assay, or immunocytochemical analysis. Since F14.11 is able to identify nef protein in the cytoplasm of lymphocytes from HIV-infected seronegative subjects it may prove useful in monitoring the expression of nef during the silent HIV-1 infection.
Study Information
pubmed
1991
10.1089/aid.1991.7.315