Production of monoclonal antibodies - Higher

Greg Foot describes how monoclonal antibodies are produced and how they work

'Mono' means one and 'clone' means identical copy. Monoclonal antibodies are identical copies of one type of antibody.

Antibodies are proteins produced by a type of white blood called lymphocytes. Pathogens have proteins on their surface called antigens. When a pathogen infects the body, the lymphocytes recognise these antigens as foreign and attack them by producing antibodies.

Diagram showing how antibodies cause pathogens to stick together

Antibodies bind to specific antigens on pathogens. This means that only one type of antibody will bind to a matching antigen. For example, an antibody that can recognise an antigen on the Salmonella bacterium will not recognise an antigen on the HIV virus. Scientists discovered that we can make antibodies to bind to antigens on other substances, and not just those that are found on pathogens. Once bound, the antigens - and the substances they are found on - are merged tightly together. This makes them easier to identify and deal with.

Formation of monoclonal antibodies

  1. An antigen is injected into a mouse.
  2. The mouse naturally produces lymphocytes, which produce antibodies specific to the antigen that was injected.
  3. Spleen cells, which produce the lymphocytes, are removed from the mouse.
  4. The spleen cells are fused with human cancerous white blood cells called myeloma cells to form hybridoma cells which divide indefinitely.
  5. These hybridoma cells divide and produce millions of monoclonal antibodies specific to the original antigen.
Diagram showing how antibodies are collected from a vaccinated mouseThe formation of monoclonal antibodies