| Literature DB >> 6213722 |
L Grangeot-Keros, L Lebrun, M J Briantais, J Pillot.
Abstract
This study was to determine the best conditions for using staphylococci bearing protein A to separate IgG from IgM. The validity of the technique was evaluated for detection of IgM with antimicrobial activity and for typing monoclonal IgM. The results indicate that separation of IgG and IgM is not entirely satisfactory in normal sera and worse in hyperglobulinemic sera. The detection and titration of IgM antimicrobial antibodies (rubella and hepatitis B core (HBc) specific IgM) was unreliable because IgG was only partially absorbed by staphylococcal cells, while a significant portion of IgM was bound. The use of higher concentrations of staphylococci did not improve the results because the more IgG was absorbed, the more IgM was also bound. It is shown that with anti-HBc specific IgM the risk of misinterpretation is very high with a sensitive radioimmunoassay technique allowing detection of trace amounts of nonabsorbed IgG. In contrast staphylococcal protein A proved useful in typing monoclonal IgM.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 6213722 DOI: 10.1016/0022-1759(82)90258-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Methods ISSN: 0022-1759 Impact factor: 2.303