| Literature DB >> 22410273 |
Amber N Stokes1, Becky L Williams, Susannah S French.
Abstract
Quantifying tetrodotoxin (TTX) has been a challenge in both ecological and medical research due to the cost, time and training required of most quantification techniques. Here we present a modified Competitive Inhibition Enzymatic Immunoassay for the quantification of TTX, and to aid researchers in the optimization of this technique for widespread use with a high degree of accuracy and repeatability.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22410273 PMCID: PMC3337821 DOI: 10.1186/1480-9222-14-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Proced Online ISSN: 1480-9222 Impact factor: 3.244
Comparisons of the calculated concentrations from two different plates run the exact same way.
| Concentration 1 | Concentration 2 | Mean | Standard | CV | Percent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 104.37 | 107.72 | 106.05 | 2.37 | 2.23 | 3.16 |
| 72.77 | 74.67 | 73.72 | 1.34 | 1.82 | 2.57 |
| 50.22 | 44.93 | 47.58 | 3.74 | 7.86 | 11.12 |
| 23.87 | 23.13 | 23.50 | 0.52 | 2.23 | 3.15 |
| 10.31 | 10.93 | 10.62 | 0.43 | 4.10 | 5.80 |
Actual standard concentrations were 100, 75, 50, 25, and 10 ng/mL from top to bottom, and were made for each plate independently
Figure 1Tetrodotoxin standard curves. (a) Standard curve of tetrodotoxin using concentrations of 100,000 ng/mL through 1 ng/mL. Each sample was run in triplicate and all points are displayed to demonstrate variation between replicates. (b) Linear portion of standard curve (± SEM). Linear range is between 10 and 500 ng/mL.
Figure 2A typical template used for plates. Each sample starts with the letter S. Samples run without primary antibodies are used to eliminate any background noise caused from the sample itself.