Development of a High-Affinity Anti-Domoic Acid Sheep scFv and its Use in Detection of the Toxin in Shellfish

2008 
The potential of immunoassays as high-throughput screening tools for the detection of harmful substances in foods will only be realized when convenient methods are available for production of the high affinity antibodies needed for sensitive assay development Recombinant antibodies offer advantages over traditional monoclonal antibodies in terms of ease of production, much greater antibody repertoire for selection, and versatility. We describe here the development of recombinant antibodies against the common shellfish toxin, domoic acid (DA), utilizing the sheep immunoglobulin system as an effective method for generating high affinity anti-hapten recombinant antibody fragments. A single-chain antibody fragment (scFv) library was generated from a sheep immunized with DA-bovine serum albumin conjugate, and anti-DA scFvs were isolated by phage-display. Three selected scFvs gave 150s of 2.6 to 58 ng/mL (8.3-186 nM) in competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (EUSA). Assay optimization with one of these scFvs gave a very reproducible standard curve with a range of 0.3 to 5.6 ng/mL (1.0 to 17.9 nM), a mean limit of quantification (LOQ, defined as the 120) of 0.5 ng/mL (1.6 nM), and a mean 150 of 1.2 ng/mL (3.9 nM). When the assay was used for the analysis of crude methanolic extracts of scallop tissues, results obtained correlated well with standard HPLC assay results (R 2 , 0.90, n = 40; R 2 , 0.81, n = 34), although EUSA results were lower than HPLC results. Adjusting the cutoff point for DA concentration accordingly from the regulatory 20 mg/kg, the potential of the sheep scFv-based EUSA for use as a screening assay for DA in shellfish extracts was demonstrated.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    24
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []