| Literature DB >> 25901899 |
Xiaojin Zhou1, Elizabeth Hui2, Xiao-Lin Yu, Zhen Lin, Ling-Kui Pu1, Zhiguan Tu, Jun Zhang2,3, Qi Liu3,4, Jian Zheng, Juan Zhang5.
Abstract
Phytase is a phosphohydrolase considered highly specific for the degradation of phytate to release bound phosphorus for animal consumption and aid in the reduction of environmental nutrient loading. New sources of phytase have been sought that are economically and efficiently productive including the construction of genetically modified (GM) phytase products designed to bypass the costs associated with feed processing. Four monoclonal antibodies (EH10a, FA7, AF9a, and CC1) raised against recombinant Aspergillus niger phyA2 were used to develop a highly specific and sensitive immunochromatographic lateral flow device for rapid detection of transgenic phytase, such as in GM corn. Antibodies sequentially paired and tested along lateral flow strips showed that the EH10a-FA7 antibody pair was able to detect the recombinant yeast-phytase at 5 ng/mL, whereas the AF9a-CC1 antibody pair to GM phytase corn was able to detect at 2 ng/mL. Concurrent to this development, evidence was revealed which suggests that antibody binding sites may be glycosylated.Entities:
Keywords: GM corn; glycosylation; lateral strips; monoclonal antibodies; phytase
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25901899 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b00188
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279