Urios P, Cittanova N
Département de Biochimie, U.F.R. Biomédicale des Saints-Pères, Paris, France.
Anal Biochem. 1990 Mar;185(2):308-12. doi: 10.1016/0003-2697(90)90299-o.
This paper describes an original methodology for determining macromolecular antigen levels by polarization of fluorescence. it involves the use of fluorescent derivatives of Fab fragments of a monoclonal antibody (Mr 50,000), whose fluorescence polarization rises significantly when it combines with a macromolecular antigen. An experimental system (Fab anti-aldosterone and aldosterone--bovine serum albumin (BSA)) is studied to test this methodology, which was then used to develop an immunoassay for human immunoglobulin M (IgM), using anti-mu chain Fabs. In the two assays, the binding stoichiometry of Fab/antigen was 10/1 and 8/1 for aldosterone--BSA and IgM, respectively. The lower limit of detection of the IgM assay was 0.8 microgram/ml and thus it was applicable to clinical detection of IgM concentrations.