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OLIGOBODIES: BENCH MADE SYNTHETIC ANTIBODIES
MARTIN RADRIZZANI, MARIANA
BROCCARDO, CESAR GONZALEZ SOLVEYRA, MICHELE BIANCHINI, GLORIA B.
REYES, EDUARDO G. CAFFERATA, TOMAS A. SANTA-COLOMA
Instituto de
Investigaciones Bioquímicas - Fundación Campomar, Buenos Aires
Key words: oligobodies, synthetic antibodies, aptamers,
random oligonucleotides, selex
Abstract
Using
synthetic peptides and a combinatorial library of 56 mer random
oligonucleotides, we have de- veloped reagents that behave as “synthetic
antibodies”. The results obtained with the protein phosphatase 2A as
a model system are shown here. The specificity of these reagents,
named “oligobodies”, has been demonstrated by Western blot
analysis and immunohistochemistry. The oligobodies have enormous
advantages compared to antibodies: their production is independent of
the immune system, they can be prepared in a few days and there is no
need for a purified target protein. These reagents can be produced
even if the corresponding protein was never isolated or purified,
since only a partial DNA sequence from a database provides enough
information to make them.
Resumen
Oligoanticuerpos:
anticuerpos sintéticos de fácil preparación. Usando péptidos
sintéticos y una biblioteca combinatoria de oligonucleótidos de 56
bases de secuencia al azar, hemos desarrollado reactivos que se
comportan como «anticuerpos sintéticos». Se muestran los resultados
obtenidos utilizando a la proteína fosfatasa 2A como modelo. La
especificidad de estos reactivos, que hemos llamado «oligobodies»,
ha sido demostrada por análisis de Western blot e
inmunohistoquímica. Los «oligobodies» tienen ventajas enormes en
comparación con los anticuerpos: su producción es independiente del
sistema inmune, pueden ser preparados en unos pocos días y no se
necesita una proteína pura. Estos reactivos pueden ser producidos
aunque la proteína correspondiente no haya sido nunca aislada o
purificada, dado que sólo una secuencia parcial de DNA obtenida de
una base de datos provee la información necesaria para construirlos.
Postal address: Dr. Tomás A. Santa-Coloma, Laboratorio de
Biología Celular y Molecular, Instituto de Investigaciones
Bioquímicas, Fundación Campomar, Av. Patricias Argentinas 435, 1405
Buenos Aires, Argentina. Fax: (54-11) 4865-2246 E-mail: tasc@iib.uba.ar
Received: 5-X-1999 Accepted: 27-X-1999
In order to produce polyclonal antibodies, it is generally
necessary to have a purified protein, a good adjuvant, and inject the
protein into rabbits or other animals. After approximately two months,
it is possible to have some good titer, depending on the antigenicity
of the injected protein. Then, to have good specificity, the antibody
has to be affinity-purified from serum. The total procedure takes
several months, and once the antibody is obtained, there is only
limited amounts. One way to obtain industrial amounts of antibodies is
to develop monoclonal antibodies. However, the procedure for making
monoclonal antibodies is cumbersome, costly and complex screening
procedures are needed to select adequate clones. An alternative
approach, in case the target protein is not available, is to make
synthetic peptides that correspond to possible antigenic sites of the
protein. These peptides are then coupled to some other protein to
increase their antigenicity (KLH, albumin, etc.) and used to inject
animals to produce polyclonal antibodies (monoclonal ones are
difficult to obtain in this way). All these procedures are very time
consuming and costly at industrial scale. Therefore, it would be of
great interest to be able to develop «synthetic antibodies», without
the need for an immune response, a purified protein, animals or
cultured cells.
In the search for these “synthetic antibodies”, one way is to
explore libraries of combinatorial synthetic compounds. The idea of
using a library of random oligonucleotides to select reagents that
recognize proteins was proposed originally by Tuerk and Gold1, with
the method called SELEX, and simultaneously by Ellington and Szostak2,
who named aptamers to these reagents. Although about 150 reagents have
been made against different proteins since the original SELEX method
was described3 and aptamers have been proposed recently as possible
rivals for antibodies4, the aptamers do not have yet a niche in the
market as replacement for antibodies. Probably different difficulties
(mainly specificity and versatility) have precluded their competition
in the market with antibodies.
We have also explored the possibility of obtaining synthetic
antibodies using a library of synthetic oligo-nucleotides, although
applying several strategies that differ from the method proposed
originally by Tuerk, Ellington and others1, 3, 5. Using these
strategies, we were able to produce oligonucleotides that behave as
“synthetic antibodies”, and we have probed their specificity using
Western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry. The reagents were
called “oligobodies” after their oligo-nucleotide origin and
usefulness as antibodies.
Materials and Methods
Animals: Cerebellar tissue was obtained from mice (inbred strain
C57BL/6J Jackson Laboratories, Barr Harbor Maine, USA), raised in the
Centro Nacional de Genética Médica, Instituto Malbrán, Buenos
Aires, Argentina.
Antibodies and synthetic peptides: A polyclonal antibody obtained in
rabbits, that recognize the 36 kDa catalytic subunit of mammalian
PP2A, and the corresponding blocking synthetic peptide (amino acids
298-309: Pro-His-Val-Thr-Arg-Arg-Thr-Pro-Asp-Tyr-Phe-Leu) were
acquired from Calbiochem (Calbio-chem-Novabiochem Corp., La Jolla, CA,
USA). The working dilution of this primary antibody was 1:500 for both
Western blots and immunohistochemistry. The secondary antibody used to
develop Western blots was a goat anti-rabbit, affinity-purified
antibody, coupled to alkaline phosphatase (dilution: 1:10.000)
(obtained from Sigma Co., St. Louis, MA, USA). For
immuno-histochemistry, a goat anti-rabbit antibody coupled to
peroxidase (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) was used as secondary antibody
(dilution 1:1.000). Staining was carried out with peroxidase substrate
following the instructions from the manufacturer.
Oligonucleotide library: A library of 100 mer oligonucleti- des (56
random) was custom synthesized at DNAgency (DNAgency, Malvern, PA,
USA), having the following sequence: 5'
-CTGCAGCCGCGGGGATCCT(N)56TCTAGTCGAATTCAA- GCTTAGTGGC-3'.
PCR amplification of the original synthetic oligonucleotide library:
The original synthetic oligonucleotide library was amplified by PCR
using the primers 5'-CTGCAGCCGCG-GGGATCCT-3' and
5'-GCCACTAAGCTTGAATTCGACTAGA-3' (custom made at DNAgency, Malvern, PA,
USA). This initial amplification is necessary, since very low yield is
obtained in the synthesis of long oligonucleotides (around 15% for a
100 mer oligonucleotide) and many truncated forms remain after the
synthesis. Therefore, this first PCR amplification minimizes the
presence of such truncated oligonucleotides and makes the library more
stable upon storage (since it becomes double-stranded). The
amplification reaction was done at a final volume of 100 µl
containing: 5' and 3' primers (1.2 µM), Taq polymerase (5 U),
template (5 µM), buffer 10X (KCl 500 mM, Tris-HCl 100 mM, pH 9.0 a
25°C, Triton X-100 1%), MgCl2 (1.5 mM), dNTPs (0.25 mM each
nucleotide), radiolabeled dCTP (1.5 x 106 cpm of (a-32P)dCTP, 3.000
Ci/mmol, NEG 513H, NEN) and RNAse-free water. For PCR-amplification,
an initial step of 5' at 94°C was followed by 35 cycles of: 94°C,
30"; 50°C, 30"; 72°C, 4" and a final step at 4°C.
Double strand separation: In order to separate both strands before
incubation with the target, the library was re-amplified using a
biotinylated down-stream primer (5’Biot-GCCACTA-AGCTTGAATTCGACTAGA-3').
After amplification, 35 µl of the PCR reaction were incubated for 10
min with 30 µl of streptavidine coupled to paramagnetic particles
(Streptavidin Magnasphere Z5482, Promega, Madison, WI, USA), washed
with 90 µl of SSC (0.1 X) and eluted with 30 µl of NaOH (0.15N). The
single strands eluted were immediately neutralized with 19 µl of
sodium acetate (0.2 M) and then diluted to 350 µl using cold PBS
containing 5% BSA.
We have observed that a permanent separation of both strands is not
necessary to obtain species capable of binding to the target.
Actually, a temporary separation of both strands obtained by heating
the sample at 94°C for 5 min., followed by a rapid cooling with equal
volume of PBS (0-4°C) is enough to obtain a good binding (as is done
normally with Northern blots). However, the dilution of both strands
has to be adequately tested, otherwise, the antisense strain would
compete to form again the double strand, making the binding to the
target almost impossible. For this reason, we used a permanent
separation of both strands only in the first cycle of selection, when
the template is highly concentrated and the binding species diluted
among non-binding species. Therefore, after the first binding cycle a
separation by heat is enough to obtain a good binding.
Binding, PCR-amplification and selection: For selection of binding
species, a solid-phase method was used. A small piece of
nitrocellulose membrane (0.12 cm2) (Schleicher and Schuell, Keene, NH,
USA) was incubated with the target peptide at saturating concentration
(10 mg/ml in water). The membrane with the adsorbed target peptide was
then incubated in a 1.5 ml plastic tube containing 350 µl of PBS-BSA
buffer (PBS, pH 7.4, BSA 5%) and 35 µl of the PCR
amplified/radiolabeled library (final concentration of
oligonucleotides is 1:10 from the original PCR reaction). The
incubation was carried-out overnight at room temperature, with gentle
agitation. The unbound oligonucleotides were washed 3 times (45
minutes each), using 1 ml of PBS with agitation (vortex at 300 rpm).
Finally, the bound oligonucleotides were eluted by heating the
membrane 10 minutes at 95°C, in 99 µl of PCR reaction without Taq
and counted in a scintilla-tion counter (Cherenkov counting) to
determine the relative amount bound compared to controls
(nitrocellulose blocked with 5% BSA). The membrane was then removed
and the PCR reaction initiated after adding the enzyme to the
remaining solution.
Target switching: After the first selection a strategy called “target
switching” was used, which involves a change from the temporary
target (synthetic peptide) to the final target, the protein. For this
reason, a second selection of the oligobodies is done, which
eliminates the remaining non-reacting oligo-nucleotides and those that
cross-react with other proteins. To do this, we incubated the
oligonucleotides of the first selection with the entire denatured
protein in a Western-blot previously developed for PP2A/C using
polyclonal antibodies and peroxidase (see below). Both strands
obtained from the PCR in the first selection were separated by heat,
diluted of 1/10 in PBS-5% BSA and incubated over night at room
temperature with the Western blot membrane. The membrane was then
washed with PBS (3 times, 15 min), the area corresponding to the PP2A
protein band selected, and the bound oligonucleotides were eluted and
re-amplified by PCR. This final product was stored as a double strand
form at -20°C.
Western blots: Freshly isolated cerebelli were homogenized in PBS
containing a cocktail of proteinase inhibitors (final concentration:
EDTA 10 mM, phenantrolin 10 mM, E-64 10 µM, leupeptine 100 µM,
aprotinine 10 mg/ml, pepstatin A 10 µM) (Sigma Co., St. Louis, MA,
USA). Protein concentration was determined using the method of Lowry
OH, et al.6. One hundred micrograms of protein was run in a 10%
SDS-PAGE according to Laemmli7, transferred to nitrocellulose
membrane8 and blocked with PBS-BSA 5%. Incubation with the rabbit
primary antibody (1/500) was performed overnight at 4°C, and with the
secondary antibody was for 1 hour at room temperature (goat
anti-rabbit phosphatase alkaline conjugated 1:10.000 in PBS-5%BSA and
developed with NBT/BCIP or nitroblue tetrazolium chloride and
5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate p-toluidine salt) (Gibco/BRL,
Gaithersburg, MD, USA) for Western blot. Oligobodies-32P-labelled were
incubated overnight at room temperature in PBS-5%BSA, washed 3 times
with PBS and exposed for 1 hour with autoradiographic film.
Immunohistochemistry: Mouse cerebelli were dissected at different
postnatal ages, fixed in alcohol/acid (95% ethanol: 5% acetic acid, 4
hours at -20°C), dehydrated, and embedded in paraffin. Five µm
tissue slices were mounted in silanized (Silane, Sigma Co., St. Louis,
MA, USA) coverglass, depa-raffinized and rehydrated before use.
Nonspecific binding sites were blocked using PBS-5%BSA during 1 hour
and the slices were exposed to primary antibodies overnight at 4°C.
Then, the slices were rinsed with PBS, incubated with the secondary
antibody (goat anti-rabbit peroxidase 1:1.000) for one hour and
developed with DAB (3-3’di-amino-bencidine tetrahydrochloride
dihydrate) (Gibco BRL, Gaithersburg, MD, USA). The
immu-nohistochemistry staining with oligobodies was performed using
biotinylated-oligobodies prepared adding a 5'-biotinilated primer to
the PCR reaction (5'-Biot-CTGCAGCCGC-GGGGATCCT-3') (custom made at
DNAgency, Malvern, PA, USA). After PCR amplification, the cDNA strands
were separated by heat (94°C, 5') and diluted ten times with
PBS-5%BSA. The presence of biotin does not affect the PCR
amplification or the binding to the target, since the bands obtained
in a Western blot stained with biotinylated-oligobodies were identical
to those developed using 32P-labelled-oligobodies (results not shown).
Control samples were made preincubating the oligobodies with an excess
of blocking peptide (overnight at 4°C). After incubation of slides
with PBS-5% BSA to block nonspecific sites, oligobodies were incubated
with the tissue for 1 hour at RT and then developed with
streptavidin-peroxidase (Sigma Co., St. Louis, MA, USA).
Results and Discussion
During the last 9 years, different oligonucleotide libraries have
been used to produce reagents having certain capacity to recognize
proteins. However, it is evident that the procedures are not yet
satisfactory to produce synthetic antibodies, since only few aptamers
that bind to proteins have been developed so far and their specificity
has not been proved. Perhaps for this reason Jayasena et al.4 believe
that the value or aptamers in most cases will be in applications of
formats where the performance of antibodies is inadequate rather than
in replacement of assays that work well with antibodies. On the
contrary, our results suggest that indeed the “oligobodies” will
replace antibodies in most cases, since they have even better
performance.
An ideal “synthetic antibody” should have three important
characteristics: high specificity, high affinity, and versatility (the
method should be able to generate synthetic antibodies against any
desirable target). Although the reagents prepared so far have high
affinity, the specificity in a mixture of proteins has not been really
proven yet (i.e. by using Western blots). In addition, in order to
obtain the reagents, it was necessary to start with a pure protein and
many cycles of amplification/selection were required (10-25 cycles), a
process that involves many intrinsic problems. More importantly, as
shown by Morris et al.9, the oligonucleotides selected from a complex
mixture of proteins, such as those found in cell membranes, seem to
recognize only few proteins among several thousand of them (lack of
versatility).
Using an interesting variation of SELEX, Xu and Ellington utilized
synthetic peptides to generate aptamers against the Rev-binding
element10. Since the protein was in a native form during the selection
procedure, the specificity was studied using gel shift. Unfortunately,
to prove specificity, only pure proteins were used in this assay
(instead of using a mixture of proteins). Therefore, they were able to
generate reagents that indeed recognized the protein Rev with high
affinity, but the specificity of these reagents was not convincingly
proved.
The present work is also based on the idea originally proposed by
Tuerk et al.1 and Ellington et al.2, that a combinatorial
oligonucleotide library should contain species able to recognize any
target. However, in order to produce highly specific synthetic
antibodies (“oligobodies”), we had to use different strategies
that differ substantially from the SELEX approach.
First, the initial library of 56 random nucleotides (plus 44
corresponding to flanking primers) was immediately amplified after
synthesis. This was done due to the low yield of the synthesizers with
long oligonucleotides (about 15% for 100 mer oligos) that produce
original single strand libraries with many truncated species. This
initial amplification minimizes the presence of such truncated forms
and increases the concentration and stability of each full-length
member. After this procedure, the library was re-amplified in the
presence of 32P labeling and the strands separated for initial binding
(see Materials and Methods for details).
The second strategy was to use synthetic peptides as “temporary
targets”, following a method similar to the one described by Xu and
Ellington10, which was discussed above. Generally, a native target
protein was used to select binding aptamers. Such procedure limits the
conformational space to those reagents that recognize only the native
protein, precluding their use as reagents in classical methods such as
Western blots, immuno-precipitations or even immunohistochemistry.
More important, such strategy limits the target to those epitopes
accessible at the protein surface. Also, when using synthetic peptides
there is no need for a pure protein, and any portion of the protein
can be used to generate oligobodies directed against both the native
or the denatured protein. In addition, by using the corres-ponding
synthetic peptides, a partial cDNA or RNA coding sequence obtained
from a database provides enough information to generate the
oligobodies. Therefore, the advantages of using synthetic peptides are
many.
The third strategy was to perform only one or at most two cycles of
amplification/selection with the peptides as temporary targets. This
strategy is critical and is clearly opposed to the SELEX strategy,
which involves as many amplification/selection cycles as possible. In
this way, using only one or two cycles, there is no bias in the
library toward high affinity “epitopes” (which obviously are not
very abundant) before selecting for specificity. What is more
important, the library remains rich in many different species that
should contain those highly specific, regardless of their affinity.
Indeed, if these highly specific species possess medium or high
affinity is not important (monoclonal antibodies have generally low
affinity compared to polyclonal antibodies, although they are very
specific). Another problem that appears using many cycles of
amplification/selection is the formation of high molecular weight
polymers, which actually impair the selection process.
The fourth strategy was to switch from the temporary target (the
peptide) to the final target (the protein either native or denatured)
immediately after detection of some binding to the temporary target, a
process that we have called “target switching”. This step is also
crucial to obtain oligobodies and it is preferably to use a very crude
preparation of the final target (the protein), because the main
objective is to select for those oligonucleotides of high specificity
rather than those of high affinity. This is also a very important
difference compared to the strategy followed by SELEX, in which the
objective is to select first for high affinity species using many
amplification/selection cycles, assuming that specificity will be a
direct consequence of the high affinity obtained11. This “target
switching” strategy with a crude preparation is decisive: if one
first select for high affinity, then it is too late to select for
specificity. Therefore, instead of performing again many cycles with
the final target, we used immediately a mixture of proteins containing
the target. In this way, regardless of their affinity, the specificity
of the selected oligobodies is granted from the beginning. In
addition, the recognition is done in a very specific way, since the
target has to be recognized among thousand of different proteins
present in the mixture.
In consequence, the objective is first to select members of the
library in a very specific way, and then the selection should be done
for those of better affinity, among the specific ones. This is similar
to what nature does: to obtain antibodies, the immune system first
selects clones that produce specific antibodies, although they might
be of low affinity (monoclonal antibodies are a good example), then
nature selects for high affinity, selecting the appropriate clones or
modifying them to obtain better affinity. We followed the same
strategy, first the selection was done to obtain specificity and then
we selected for high affinity (by extensive washing or by cloning).
Even more so the affinity could be potentially improved in a later
step, by introduction of random mutations in the selected species (in
vitro evolution).
As an example of application of the above-mentioned strategies, we
show here the results obtained using a synthetic peptide corresponding
to the protein phos-phatase PP2A. After amplification of the original
library in the presence of 32P labeled nucleotides, and separation of
double strands by using avidine-sepharose, the peptides were bound to
nitrocellulose (at saturating concentration) and incubated with the
library. It is very important to note that we do not pre-adsorb the
library with nitrocellulose, since that procedure might reduce the
variety of the oligonucleotides present (the objective has always been
to keep the library diversity at maximum). After binding to the
peptides, the oligonucleotides were eluted and amplified for a further
selection with the final target. We consider that one cycle of PCR
amplification (two at most) after binding provides enough enrichment
to obtain oligobodies. As mentioned before, to use many cycles is
adverse, since polymers are formed, the selection is biased toward
those few members of high affinity, and what is worse, “diversity”,
which is the most important feature of a library to obtain
specificity, is irremediable lost.
Then, the selected oligobodies were incubated with the target protein
(“target switching”, using PP2A in this case) contained in a
mixture of proteins extracted with RIPA buffer from mouse cerebellum,
and blotted on nitrocellulose. The spot corresponding to PP2A
(developed in parallel with polyclonal antibodies) was cut, eluted and
PCR amplified. In this way, we obtained for the first time “polyclonal
obligobodies” that behave exactly as their polyclonal counterpart.
As shown in Figure 1, the spots recognized using the oligobodies to
develop the Western blots were identical to those recognized by
polyclonal antibodies. These results indicate that very specific
reagents that behave exactly as polyclonal antibodies were generated.
These oligobodies can be cloned into vector T and screened to obtain
very easily “monoclonal oligobodies” which are also suitable for
immunoprecipitations (results not shown, manuscript in preparation).
We further compare both the polyclonal antibodies and the oligobodies
studying their behavior as reagents for immunohistochemistry. Figure 2
shows the results obtained staining cerebellum slices with polyclonal
antibodies against PP2A or by using oligobodies (labeled now by using
a biotinylated primer). Both antibodies were developed using
avidine-peroxidase. The controls were made by pre-incubation of the
oligobodies with the synthetic peptide (blocking peptide) used to
produce them. As shown in the figure, the results obtained with the
polyclonal antibody were identical to those obtained with the
oligobodies and the pattern obtained using both antibodies is in
agreement with the localization of PP2A reported by Hashikawa et al.12
in rat cerebellum
In conclusion, we were able to develop synthetic reagents that behave
exactly as synthetic antibodies. Their specificity has been clearly
proven by Western blots and immunohistochemistry. These reagents will
probably replace polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies in many
applications. In this regard, a very important characteristic of
oligobodies is their relative small size compared to antibodies (about
1/10 excluding the primers), which make them much more diffusible and,
therefore, better putative “missiles” than antibodies to carry
drugs into tumors.
Acknowledgements: We thanks to Dr. Marcelo A. Dankert (IIB, Fundación
Campomar) and Dr. Jorge Mazza (Vilmax S.A.) for constant support of
our work.
References
1. Tuerk C, Gold L. Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential
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2. Ellington AD, Szostak JW. In vitro selection of RNA molecules that
bind specific lingands. Nature 1990; 346: 818-22.
3. Schneider D, Tuerk C, Gold L. Selection of high affinity RNA
ligands to the bacteriophage R17 coat protei. J Mol Biol 1992; 228:
862-9.
4. Jayasena SD. Aptamers: an emerging class of molecules that rival
antibodies in diagnostic. Clin Chem 1999; 45: 1628-50.
5. Gold L. The SELEX process: a surprising source of therapeutic and
diagnostic compounds. Harvey Lect 1995; 91: 47-57.
6. Lowry OH, Rosebrough NJ, Farr AL, et al. Protein measurement with
the Folin phenol reagent. J Biol Chem 1951; 193: 265-75.
7. Laemmli UK. Cleavage of structural proteins during the assembly of
the head of bacteriophage T4. Nature 1970; 227: 680-5.
8. Towbin H, Staehelin T, Gordon J. Electrophoretic transfer of
proteins from polyacrylamide gels to nitrocellulose sheets: Procedure
and some applications. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1979, 76: 4350-4.
9. Morris KN, Jensen KB, Julin CM, et al. High affinity ligands from
in vitro selection: complex targets. Proc Natl Acad Sci USa 1998; 95:
2902-7.
10. Xu W, Ellington AD. Anti-peptide aptamers recognize amino acid
sequence and bind a protein epitope. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1996; 93:
7475-80.
11. Eaton BE, Gold L, Zichi DA. Let’s get specific: the relationship
between specificity and affinity. Chem Biol 1995; 2: 633-8.
12. Hashikawa T, Nakazawa K, Mikawa S, et al. Immuno-histochemical
localization of protein phosphatase isoforms in the rat cerebellum.
Neurosci Res 1995; 22: 133-6.
Fig. 2.– Immunohistochemistry of cerebellar slices at postnatal
day 12. A, E: Hematoxilin-Eosin staining. B, F: Polyclonal antibodies
(primary/secondary-peroxidase). C, G: oligobodies
(oligobody-biotin/avidine-peroxidase). D, H: controls made with
oligobodies preincubated with PP2A blocking peptide. Magnification was
400X for A, B, C (bright field) and D (phase contrast), 45X for E, F,
G and H (bright field). Similar pattern of staining was obtained using
either polyclonal antibodies or oligobodies.
Fig. 1.– Western blot analysis of PP2A protein extracted from
cerebellum. Detection of PP2A was carried out using A: primary
polyclonal antibodies and secondary antibodies coupled to alkaline
phosphatase. B: oligobodies radiolabeled with 32P (autoradiography).
Similar pattern at different postnatal ages (P#, in days) was obtained
using both reagents.
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