Worm Breeder's Gazette 8(2): 17

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

Stage Specific Surface Antigens and Antibodies

S. Politz

I am developing stage-specific cuticle antibodies to help identify 
genes controlling the stage transitions in C.  elegans.  I want to use 
these antibodies to select heterochronic mutants expressing stage-
specific cuticle antigens at alternative times in development compared 
to wild-type.  Rabbit anti-cuticle antibodies elicited by immunization 
with whole cuticles or solubilized cuticle collagens bind to the 
surface of live worms, making it fluoresce uniformly when fluorescein 
conjugated (FITC) second antibody is applied.  Surface 
immunofluorescence was at first visualized in the compound microscope. 
Recently, I have developed an arrangement for viewing 
immunofluorescing worms on agarose plates under a low power dissecting 
microscope adapted for illumination by an FITC excitation source.  
This allows me to pick individual live fluorescing worms by the normal 
method.  The basic strategy for using stage-specific antibodies to 
select heterochronic mutants is to bind antibody to worm populations 
under conditions of synchrony or genetic background where only mutants 
expressing stage-specific antigens heterochronically will fluoresce, 
enabling them to be recognized amongst thousands of nonfluorescent 
wild-type worms.  Approaches involving adult-specific antibodies are 
in progress; characterization of adult-specific antibodies and surface 
antigens is described below.  For antibody characterization, I devised 
a quantitative radioimmunoassay to measure surface binding of 
antibodies.  Aliquots containing about 500 worms are incubated with 
antiserum, washed, incubated with [125I]-labeled Staph.  aureus 
protein A, washed, and counted for total bound radioactivity.  Binding 
is saturable by worms, antiserum, or protein A, indicating 
stoichiometric reaction.  Pre-immune serum gives minimal binding.  
This assay has been used to study stage-specificity of antibodies and 
antigens.  Rabbit anti-adult cuticle serum cross-reacts with the 
surface of live L4's.  I have made the serum adult-specific by 
adsorption; after adsorption with saturating numbers of live L4's, 
serum no longer binds detectably to L4's, but binding to adults is 
reduced by only 50%.  As expected, this adult-specific serum does not 
bind to adults of strain CB0912(lin-4), a retarded cell-lineage mutant 
that never develops adult cuticle.  After a serum made to L4 cuticles 
was adsorbed with saturating numbers of adults, no binding to either 
L4's or adults was observed.  These results indicate the existence of 
at least two distinct classes of surface antigens; i.e., those common 
to both L4 and adult cuticles, and those restricted to the adult 
cuticle (adult-specific surface antigens).