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Antigen itself antibody: an alternative one‐step immunoassay for measuring the anti‐idiotypic antibody titer
Author(s) -
Kabir M. Enamul,
Krishnaswamy Senthilkumar,
Selvakumar Dakshnamurthy,
Miyamoto Masahiko,
Furuichi Yasuhiro,
Komiyama Tadazumi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
microbiology and immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.664
H-Index - 70
eISSN - 1348-0421
pISSN - 0385-5600
DOI - 10.1111/1348-0421.12178
Subject(s) - antibody , antigen , titer , immunoassay , antibody titer , biology , immunology , monoclonal antibody , primary and secondary antibodies , microbiology and biotechnology , virology
Immunoassay designs rely on the great specificity of antibodies and a suitable marker that facilitates generation of a quantitative signal. Currently, there is no reliable method for measuring the titers of an anti‐idiotypic antibody. Our initial attempt to measure titers of mouse anti‐idiotypic antibody after idiotypic vaccination with HM‐1 killer toxin neutralizing monoclonal antibody (nmAb‐KT) failed. Because the injected antigen, nmAb‐KT, is a mouse IgG, using a commercial antibody to measure the antibody titer always gave a false positive signal against control mouse serum antibody in parallel with the antigen‐treated immunized serum antibodies. To get a reliable and clearly differentiable signal by ELISA, idiotypic antigen was labeled with HRP and HRP‐conjugated‐nmAb‐KT used to measure the antibody titers in the antigen‐treated mice. Compared with control mice, signals were found in high anti‐nmAb‐KT IgG responses in test mice; however, untreated control mice had a significant amount of purified non‐specific IgG. This method is amenable to long read lengths and will likely enable anti‐idiotypic antibody titer measurement in a more specific and cost effective way without requiring commercial antibody.