Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 30: 1441-1445, 1984;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 30, 1441-1445, Copyright © 1984 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Highly sensitive immunoassays based on use of liposomes without complement

WJ Litchfield, JW Freytag and M Adamich

We describe a novel liposome-based immunoassay in which covalently linked hapten-cytolysin conjugates are used instead of complement and surface-immobilized immunoreagents. Stable, unilamellar liposomes containing entrapped alkaline phosphatase as a marker enzyme were prepared by dialysis of octyl glucoside from suspensions of cholesterol and egg yolk lecithin. The resulting vesicles could be immediately lysed by addition of either bee venom melittin or hapten-melittin conjugates. Using ouabain, an analog of digoxin, we synthesized conjugates that were more lytic than mellitin alone but that were inhibited in the presence of antibody. This inhibition was affected by adding competing free digoxin at various concentrations to obtain standard curves. The same liposome preparations could be lysed with a biotin-melittin conjugate, which was inhibited by avidin. The latter system was affected by free biotin and might be used to couple this approach to various heterogeneous immunoassays.





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Copyright © 1984 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.