A radioimmune assay for uridine 5'-diphosphate-galactose (UDP-Gal):GM2 galactosyltransferase, which synthesizes GM1, has been developed utilizing cholera toxin. This assay is more sensitive and simpler than previously used assays. Radioactive nucleotide substrate and GM2 were incubated with an enzym
A Ganglioside-Based Assay for Cholera Toxin Using an Array Biosensor
โ Scribed by C.A. Rowe-Taitt; J.J. Cras; C.H. Patterson; J.P. Golden; F.S. Ligler
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 160 KB
- Volume
- 281
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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โฆ Synopsis
A rapid assay for cholera toxin (CT) has been developed using a fluorescence-based biosensor. This sensor was capable of analyzing six samples simultaneously for CT in 20 min with few manipulations required by the operator. The biochemical assays utilized a ganglioside-"capture" format: ganglioside GM1, utilized for capture of analyte, was immobilized in discrete locations on the surface of the optical waveguide. Binding of CT to immobilized GM1 was demonstrated with direct assays (using fluorescently labeled CT) and "sandwich" immunoassays (using fluorescently labeled tracer antibodies). Limits of detection for CT were 200 ng/ml in direct assays and 40 ng/ml and 1 g/ml in sandwich-type assays performed using rabbit and goat tracer antibodies. Binding of CT to other glycolipid capture reagents was also observed. While significant CT binding was observed to loci patterned with GD1b, Gb3, and Gb4, CT did not bind significantly to immobilized GT1b at the concentrations tested. This is the first description of such a non-antibody-based recognition system in a multi-specific planar array sensor.
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