| Literature DB >> 28869652 |
Changqi Liu1, Guneet S Chhabra1, Jing Zhao1, Valerie D Zaffran1, Sahil Gupta1, Kenneth H Roux2, Thomas M Gradziel3, Shridhar K Sathe1.
Abstract
A commercially available monoclonal antibody (mAb)-based direct sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit (BioFront Technologies, Tallahassee, Fla., U.S.A.) was compared with an in-house developed mAb 4C10-based ELISA for almond detection. The assays were comparable in sensitivity (limit of detection < 1 ppm full fat almond, limit of quantification < 5 ppm full fat almond), specificity (no cross-reactivity with 156 tested foods at a concentration of 100000 ppm whole sample), and reproducibility (intra- and interassay variability < 15% CV). The target antigens were stable and detectable in whole almond seeds subjected to autoclaving, blanching, frying, microwaving, and dry roasting. The almond recovery ranges for spiked food matrices were 84.3% to 124.6% for 4C10 ELISA and 81.2% to 127.4% for MonoTrace ELISA. The almond recovery ranges for commercial and laboratory prepared foods with declared/known almond amount were 30.9% to 161.2% for 4C10 ELISA and 38.1% to 207.6% for MonoTrace ELISA. Neither assay registered any false-positive or negative results among the tested commercial and laboratory prepared samples. PRACTICAL APPLICATION: Ability to detect and quantify trace amounts of almonds is important for improving safety of almond sensitive consumers. Two monoclonal antibody-based ELISAs were compared for almond detection. The information is useful to food industry, regulatory agencies, scientific community, and almond consumers.Entities:
Keywords: 4C10; ELISA; MonoTrace; almond; mAb
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28869652 DOI: 10.1111/1750-3841.13829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Food Sci ISSN: 0022-1147 Impact factor: 3.167