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CLINICAL CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 6

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... and untagged antigen ( patient ) compete for specific antibody in a curvet. The curvet is exposed to polarized fluorescent light ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 6


1
CLINICAL CHEMISTRYCHAPTER 6
  • IMMUNOASSAYS

2
  • Introduction
  • In the last chapter, we discussed a variety of
    analytical techniques
  • In this chapter well add some new techniques
    They all involve the use of antibody
    antigen reactions
  • Antibody Antigen reactions have the advantage
    of being very specific

3
Key Terms
  • Antibody
  • Antigen
  • Affinity
  • Avidity
  • Competitive Immunoassay
  • Heterogeneous Immunoassay
  • Homogeneous Immunoassay
  • IEP
  • IFE
  • Nephelometry
  • Non-competitive Immunoassay
  • Postzone
  • Prozone
  • Tracer ( Tag )
  • Turbidimetry
  • Haptene
  • Crossreactivity
  • Polyclonal
  • Monoclonal
  • Prozone
  • Postzone

4
  • Objectives
  • Discuss the basic principles of the following
    immunoassays
  • Immunoelectrophoresis ( IEP )
  • Immunofixation Electrophoresis ( IFE )
  • Nephelometry and Turbidimetry
  • Competitive Immunoassays ( RIA, EIA, FIA )
  • Non-competitive Immunoassays
  • Fluorescence Polarization
  • Discuss different types of tags or labels used in
    immunoassays
  • Classify homogenous, heterogeneous, competitive
    and noncompetitive immunoassay techniques
  • Discuss methods of separation of free and bound
    tagged reagents

5
  • Immunoelectrophoresis ( IEP )
  • Electrophoresis of antigens is followed by the
    addition of various antibodies to a parallel
    trough along the separated proteins
  • The antibodies diffuse through the agar and form
    lines of precipitation with their respective
    antigens
  • The visible precipitant arcs can be compared to
    known standards to identify specific protein
    bands Or to detect missing bands

6
Immunoelectrophoresis ( IEP )
Step 1. Patient plasma is placed in a well and
undergoes electrophoresis.
Precipitant lines against 3 proteins


Step 2 Known anti-sera against one or more
proteins is placed in a parallel trough after
electrophoresis and diffuses through the
agar. Visible lines of precipitation form if
antibody antigen reaction occurs.
7
  • IMMUNOFIXATION ELECTROPHORESIS ( IFE )
  • Antibody is poured over a completed
    electrophoresis procedure (
    performed on an agar surface ) to produce
    visible precipitation lines

8
  • ROCKET ( LAURELL TECHNIQUE )
  • Modification of IEP technique
  • Antigen ( proteins ) undergo electrophoresis in a
    supporting agarose gel with specific antibody
    previously mixed into the gel
  • As antigen moves thru the gel , antigen-antibody
    complexes form creating visible precipitation
    lines in the shape of long arches or rockets
  • The length of these rockets is proportional to
    the concentration of antigen

9
  • Turbidimetry and Nephelometry
  • Light is obstructed by insoluble complexes (
    usually antibody antigen )
  • Light is obstructed by these insoluble complexes
  • Turbidimetry measures transmitted light
  • Photo-detector is placed at 180 degrees from
    the light source
  • Nephelometry measures scattered light
  • Photo-detector is placed at 90 degrees from the
    light source

10
  • Labeled Immunoassays
  • Antigen or antibody is labeled ( tagged ) with a
    substance that can be detected later on and
    allows for the detection of an antibody antigen
    reaction
  • Different binding agents are allowed to attach to
    substances we want to measure.
  • The type of binding agent defines what type of
    assay it is
  • Antibody Immunoassay
  • Transport Protein Competitive Assay
  • Hormone receptor Receptor Assay
  • Types of tags
  • Radioactive isotopes
  • Enzymes
  • Fluorescent molecules

11
  • Competitive Immunoassays
  • Competition between tagged and un-tagged antigen
    for limited antibody
  • Tagged antigen Reagent
  • Untagged antigen Patient antigen we want to
    measure
  • Specific antibody Reagent
  • Let the competition begin !!!
  • Mix the three components together
  • Allow the antigens to compete for the limited
    antibody
  • Antibody will bind with tagged or un-tagged
    antigen ( it doesnt care )
  • Separation Step Antibody-Antigen complexes are
    separated from free antigen
  • Tagged antibody-antigen complex is measured

12
  • The tagged antigen and antibody from the reagent
    kit are constant.
  • The only variable is the concentration of the
    patient antigen ( the thing we want to
    measure )
  • A standard curve can be constructed with known
    antigen concentrations giving the following
    general results
  • High concentrations of patient antigen means
    that more of the antibody-antigen complexes are
    untagged
  • Low concentrations of patient antigen means
    that more of the antibody-antigen complexes are
    tagged
  • There is an inverse relationship between patient
    antigen concentration and tag activity after the
    separation process

13
Competitive Labeled Immunoassays ( RIA, FIA, EIA
)
A competition between tagged antigens ( reagent )
and untagged antigens ( patient )for a limited
amount of antibody ( reagent )
14
Calculation of RIA / FIA / EIA
The activity of the tag is measured twice
Before separation step Total tag
activity After separation step Bound tag
activity ( antibody antigen complex ) Note
that the separation process removes all unbound (
free ) tag from the testing B B / T x
100 The ratio of the Bound activity to the Total
activity ( B / T ) decreases as the
concentration of the patients ( untagged )
antigen increases. Using Standard solutions of
known antigen concentrations, the B is plotted
against the concentrations of the Standards
15
Example of an Competitive Assay Standard Curve
B / T
0
Concentration
16
ELISA ( Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay )
  • - Antibody is adsorbed onto a solid surface
  • - Tagged and untagged antigens compete for
    limited antibody
  • Separation is achieved by pouring off excess
    unbound ( free ) antigen
  • Enzymatic activity is inversely proportional
    to patient antigen concentration

17
EMIT ( Enzyme Multiplied Immunoassay Technique )
Enzyme tag
Homogenous technique - no separation step of
antibody - bound and free antigen Steric
hindrance Antibody binding to the
enzymetaggedantigen inhibits enzymatic
activity Patient antigen concentration is
inversely proportional to enzyme activity
18
Immunometric Technique
- Immunometric techniques utilize a tagged
antibody - Patient antigen concentration is
proportional to measured tag activity
19
Fluorescence Polarization Immunoassay
  • Competitive Immunoassay
  • Homogenous assay No separation step required
  • Fluorescent tagged antigen ( reagent ) and
    untagged antigen ( patient ) compete for
    specific antibody in a curvet
  • The curvet is exposed to polarized fluorescent
    light
  • Large molecules ( tagged - antigen antibody
    complexes ) emit polarized light, where as
    smaller molecules ( free tagged antigens ) do
    not
  • The amount of polarized light emitted is
    inversely proportional to the concentration of
    patient ( untagged ) antigen
  • Fluorescence Polarization is used by the ABBOTT
    TDX analyzer, commonly used for Therapeutic Drug
    Monitoring ( TDM )

20
Example of Polarized and Normal Light
  • Normal light has wavelengths that occur in
    all planes
  • - A polarizing filter blocks all planes
    except one, but the wavelength is unchanged

21
Tagged antigen
Untagged antigen
Fluorescence Polarization
Antibody
( Low concentration of patient antigen )
Most of the limited antibody will bind with
fluorescent tagged antigen. Large bound molecules
will increase emission of polarized light.
22
Tagged antigen
Untagged antigen
Fluorescence Polarization
Antibody
( High concentration of patient antigen )
Most of the limited antibody will bind with
untagged patient antigen. Free unbound
fluorescent antigen will decrease emission of
polarized light.
23
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