A simple and efficient procedure for the construction of bifunctional molecules is described and their use in a variety of applications documented. This procedure is based on our observation that mouse IgG1 monoclonal antibodies, when mixed with equimolar amounts of a high-affinity rat monoclonal antibody specific for mouse IgG1, yield uniform cyclic tetramolecular complexes each consisting of two mouse and two rat antibodies as shown by gel electrophoresis and electron microscopy. When solutions of two mouse antibodies (e.g. a and b) are mixed prior to the formation of complexes with the rat antibody, stable bispecific (a X b) complexes together with monospecific (a X a and b X b) complexes are obtained. Bispecific complexes prepared in this way were able to efficiently bind peroxidase to cell surface antigens, and to bind red blood cells to selected nucleated cell types present in heterogeneous populations. Tetrameric antibody complexes are more easily prepared than bispecific antibodies or bifunctional antibodies produced by transfection of myelomas with recombinant genes. They also have the advantage that the antigen-binding properties of the bivalent monoclonal antibodies are not compromised. Tetrameric antibody complexes thus represent a powerful new type of cross-linking reagent that may have a wide spectrum of applications in biology and medicine.
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