Quantitative Measurement of Mouse IgG Subclasses with the Use of Heteroantisera: The Importance of Allotype Considerations

Abstract
Double antibody radioimmunoassays have been used to determine the quantities of IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b in samples of normal serum IgG from BALB/cJ, AKR/J and C57BL/6J inbred mice. The assays employed subclass-specific goat antisera which had been prepared with BALB/c myeloma proteins as immunogens and as immunoabsorbents. 125I-labeled BALB/c myeloma proteins were used as probes. Results indicate that partial resolution of mouse IgG subclasses was achieved by ion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sephadex. Nearly all of the protein in BALB/cJ and AKR/J IgG fractions could be accounted for as IgG1, IgG2a and IgG2b, and IgG2a was the predominant species observed. However, considerably less protein in C57BL/6J IgG fractions of purity similar to the BALB/cJ fractions could be accounted for as these three subclasses, and virtually no IgG2a was detected. Furthermore, an IgG2a myeloma protein bearing the C57BL/6 allotype failed to inhibit the IgG2a-specific assay significantly. Thus the IgG2a-specific antibody in the goat heteroantiserum employed appeared to consist nearly exclusively of antibody to BALB/c Ig-1a allotypic determinants. These findings point to the importance of allotype considerations in the use of heteroantisera to quantitate IgG subclasses.