Creating Hybridoma Cells
Introduction
- Monoclonal antibodies (Mabs) are artificially produced antibodies produced from a single B cell clone
- The hybridoma method is used to make monoclonal antibodies
- The method enables large quantities of identical antibodies to be produced
- The hybridoma method solved the problem of having B cells that could divide by mitosis but not produce antibodies and plasma cells that could produce antibodies but not divide
- This method was established in the 1970s
- Monoclonal antibodies bind antigens, in the same way naturally produced antibodies
Creating Hybridoma cells
- Hybridoma cells are created by combining specific antibody producing B cells with myeloma (tumour) cells
- Plasma cells producing the required antibodies are created by injecting mice with the target antigen to trigger an immune response
- This results in plasma cells producing the required antibodies to complement the target antigen
- These plasma cells are removed from the spleen of the mouse before being fused with immortal myeloma cells cultured in the lab to make hybridoma cells
- Hybridoma cells producing the required monoclonal antibody can then be isolated and used in large scale monoclonal antibody production