A3 Refereed book chapter or chapter in a compilation book

Detection of Food Taints and Contaminants Using Novel Engineered Antibodies




AuthorsLeivo J., Lamminmäki U.

EditorsRichard O’Kennedy

PublisherRoyal Society of Chemistry

Publication year2019

Book title Rapid Antibody-based Technologies in Food Analysis

Journal name in sourceFood Chemistry, Function and Analysis

Series titleFood Chemistry, Function and Analysis

Volume15

First page 308

Last page329

ISBN978-1-78801-390-1

eISBN978-1-78801-791-6

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1039/9781788016322-00308


Abstract

This chapter describes technologies and methods widely employed in the development and engineering of antibodies utilized in food diagnostics. Immunoassays have been considered as the golden standard for the simple, high-throughput screening of contaminants from a variety of matrices. Cost-efficiency, in combination with increasingly efficacious tools for obtaining antibodies with high specificity and affinity, has led to the widespread use of immunoassays for the routine detection of various food contaminants. As the quality of the immunoassay is primarily dependent on the binding properties, such as affinity and specificity, of the antibody used to recognize the contaminating compound, it is often feasible to modify these properties to enhance the performance of the assay. The rapid development of directed antibody engineering technologies in the past three decades has facilitated the generation of assays with novel specificity for high-throughput analysis of foodstuffs. More recently, antibodies with novel specificity have been utilized to develop high-performance analytical methods which have expanded the limits of traditional immunoassays, in terms of sensitivity and number of detectable contaminants.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:06