Publication | Closed Access
A General Method To Select Antibody Fragments Suitable for Noncompetitive Detection of Monovalent Antigens
30
Citations
16
References
2003
Year
Immunocytochemical TechniqueEngineeringMonovalent AntigensImmunologySmall HaptenImmunodominanceGeneral MethodImmunotherapyImmunoassaysProtein PurificationBioanalysisSerologic TestingImmunochemistryAnalytical ChemistryAntibody EngineeringClinical ChemistryChromatographyAllergyOpen SandwichAntibody ScreeningBiomolecular EngineeringAntibody Fragments SuitableCompetitive FormatProtein EngineeringMedicine
Previously, immunological detection of a small hapten was only possible in competitive format, which needed a competitor antigen either labeled by a reporter or attached to a carrier protein. Recently, we proposed the open sandwich (OS) immunoassay, a simple immunoassay that can noncompetitively determine monovalent antigen concentration by measuring the antigen-dependent change in a heavy-chain variable region (VH)/light-chain variable region (VL) interaction of an antibody. However, there was a limitation in the assay that the antibody used should have a suitable property such that the VH/VL interaction would become fairly strong along with the addition of antigen. Here, we devised a phage-based "split-Fv system" to rapidly evaluate and select antibody variable region (Fv) fragments that are suitable to OS immunoassay. When three antibodies raised against endocrine disruptor bisphenol A were tested with this system, all were more or less suitable to OS-ELISA. Among them, the best Fv selected was used to construct fusion proteins of VH tethered to an alkaline phosphatase and a tagged VL that can be site-specifically biotinylated to perform direct OS-ELISA. The results showed that the OS-ELISA detects bisphenol A with higher sensitivity than the corresponding competitive assay, also implying that many antibodies to small haptens have suitable properties for OS-ELISA.
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