Radiobinding assay

A radiobinding assay is a method of detecting and quantifying antibodies targeted toward a specific antigen. As such, it can be seen as the inverse of radioimmunoassay, which quantifies an antigen by use of corresponding antibodies.

Technique

The corresponding antigen is radiolabeled and mixed with the fluid that may contain the antibody, such as blood serum from a person. Presence of antibodies causes precipitation of antibody-antigen complexes that can be collected by centrifugation into pellets. The amount of antibody is proportional to the radioactivity of the pellet, as determined by gamma counting.[1]

Uses

It is used to detect most autoantibodies seen in latent autoimmune diabetes.[2]

gollark: I only know of one with villagers.
gollark: Again, there are no creative solutions to chunkloading, except exploiting bugs.
gollark: Eh, whatever. I just don't like paying to work around implementation details.
gollark: Whereas there can be fun in building increasingly convoluted furnace setups.
gollark: There's no actual *fun* in just waiting around because you have to.

References

  1. Anti-dsDNA [I-125] Radiobinding Assay Kit At PerkinElmer Life Sciences, Inc. Retrieved Jan 2011
  2. Knip, M.; Veijola, R.; Virtanen, S. M.; Hyoty, H.; Vaarala, O.; Akerblom, H. K. (2005). "Environmental Triggers and Determinants of Type 1 Diabetes". Diabetes. 54: S125–S136. doi:10.2337/diabetes.54.suppl_2.S125. PMID 16306330.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.