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The Journal of Neuroscience logoLink to The Journal of Neuroscience
. 1987 May 1;7(5):1520–1525. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.07-05-01520.1987

Monoclonal antibodies against rat brain protein kinase C and their application to immunocytochemistry in nervous tissues

T Kitano, T Hashimoto, U Kikkawa, K Ase, N Saito, C Tanaka, Y Ichimori, K Tsukamoto, Y Nishizuka
PMCID: PMC6568814  PMID: 3553449

Abstract

Three monoclonal antibodies were prepared against rat brain soluble protein kinase C. Two of the antibodies, CKI-97 (IgG2b subclass) and CKII-90 (IgG1 subclass), showed weak binding to native protein kinase C. The third antibody, CKI-33 (IgG2b subclass), showed no binding. However, the mixture of CKI-97, CKII-90, and CKI-33 exhibited much stronger binding activity to this protein kinase than any of the antibodies alone. Although none of these antibodies showed protein kinase C-neutralizing activity, Western blot analysis indicated that these antibodies reacted specifically with protein kinase C, presumably its subspecies, that is present predominantly in nervous tissues. Immunocytochemical studies shows that these antibodies can be used for identification of this enzyme in nervous tissues. In rat Purkinje cells, the immunoreactive material was present throughout the cytoplasm, including dendrites and axons, but was poorly represented in the cell nucleus. In cerebellum, the localization of protein kinase C appears to be very similar to that of cGMP-dependent protein kinase.


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