Literature DB >> 9883559

Immobilized chicken antibodies improve the detection of serum antigens with surface plasmon resonance (SPR).

T P Vikinge1, A Askendal, B Liedberg, T Lindahl, P Tengvall.   

Abstract

Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and other refractive index and mass sensitive methods are, due to complement activation by mouse monoclonal antibodies and with concomitant high background signal, only rarely used for the detection of antibody-antigen interactions in the blood serum milieu. In the present study chicken IgY and mouse IgG were immobilized to a sensor chip CM5 dextran matrix and compared for their background signal and detection of serum antigen. Ellipsometry with antibodies adsorbed to methylated silicon surfaces was used as a complementary detection method. As expected, fundamental differences in binding properties between the two kinds of antibodies were observed. Mouse antibodies bound large quantities of human serum. Human C1q was detected on mouse IgG and the complement system was activated, as seen from the rapid C3 and properdin depositions. Chicken antibodies bound low quantities of human serum and no human C1q. Moreover, C3 and properdin deposited only after prolonged serum incubations. Addition of EDTA to serum reduced the background signal modestly for both IgG and IgY. Serum samples with different concentrations of human C3 were injected over surfaces with immobilized chicken anti-C3, and the response was measured by SPR. Small concentration differences (< 1.25 micrograms/ml) in a physiologically relevant range (1-40 micrograms/ml after 100 times dilution) could then be detected reproducibly. The SPR signal was totally obscured when a mouse monoclonal anti-C3 antibody was used for the detection.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9883559     DOI: 10.1016/s0956-5663(98)00085-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron        ISSN: 0956-5663            Impact factor:   10.618


  3 in total

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Authors:  William J J Finlay; Laird Bloom; Orla Cunningham
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2011

2.  Phage Display: A Powerful Technology for the Generation of High-Specificity Affinity Reagents from Alternative Immune Sources.

Authors:  William J J Finlay; Laird Bloom; Joanne Grant; Edward Franklin; Deirdre Ní Shúilleabháin; Orla Cunningham
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2017

Review 3.  Avian IgY antibodies and their recombinant equivalents in research, diagnostics and therapy.

Authors:  Edzard Spillner; Ingke Braren; Kerstin Greunke; Henning Seismann; Simon Blank; Dion du Plessis
Journal:  Biologicals       Date:  2012-06-28       Impact factor: 1.856

  3 in total

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