Application of ADA1 as a new marker enzyme in sandwich ELISA to study the effect of adenosine on activated monocytes




Chengqian Liu, Maksym Skaldin, Chengxiang Wu, Yuanan Lu, Andrey V. Zavialov

PublisherNATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

2016

Scientific Reports

31370

6

9

2045-2322

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/srep31370



Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is a valuable technique to detect antigens in biological fluids. Horse radish peroxidase (HRP) is one of the most common enzymes used for signal amplification in ELISA. Despite new advances in technology, such as a large-scale production of recombinant enzymes and availability of new detection systems, limited research is devoted to finding alternative enzymes and their substrates to amplify the ELISA signals. Here, HRP-avidin was substituted with the human adenosine deaminase (hADA1)-streptavidin complex and adenosine as a detection system in commercial ELISA kits. The hADA1 ELISA was successfully used to demonstrate that adenosine, bound to A1 and A3 adenosine receptors, increases cytokine secretion by LPS activated monocytes. We show that hADA1-based ELISA has the same sensitivity, and also provides identical results, as HRP ELISA. In addition, the sensitivity of hADA1-based ELISA could be easily adjusted by changing the adenosine concentration and the incubation time. Therefore, hADA1 could be used as a detection enzyme with any commercial ELISA kit with a wide range of concentration of antigens.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 10:45