Evaluation of envelope domain III-based single chimeric tetravalent antigen and monovalent antigen mixtures for the detection of anti-dengue antibodies in human sera

Batra, Gaurav ; Nemani, Satish K. ; Tyagi, Poornima ; Swaminathan, Sathyamangalam ; Khanna, Navin (2011) Evaluation of envelope domain III-based single chimeric tetravalent antigen and monovalent antigen mixtures for the detection of anti-dengue antibodies in human sera BMC Infectious Diseases, 11 (1). Article ID 64. ISSN 1471-2334

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Official URL: https://bmcinfectdis.biomedcentral.com/articles/10...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-11-64

Abstract

Background: Flavivirus cross-reactive antibodies in human sera interfere with the definitive identification of Dengue Virus (DENV) infections especially in areas with multiple co-circulating flaviviruses. Use of DENV envelope domain-III (EDIII) can partially resolve the problem. This study has examined the effect of (i) incorporating the EDIIIs of four DENV serotypes into a single chimeric antigen, and (ii) immobilizing the antigen through specific interaction on the sensitivity and specificity of anti-DENV antibody detection. Methods: A sera panel (n = 164) was assembled and characterized using commercial kits for infection by DENV and a host of other pathogens. Anti-DENV antibodies of both IgM and IgG classes in this panel were detected in indirect ELISAs using a mixture of monovalent EDIIIs, a chimeric EDIII-based tetravalent antigen, EDIII-T, and a biotinylated version of the latter as coating antigens. The sensitivity and specificity of these assays were compared to those obtained using the PanBio Dengue IgG/IgM ELISAs. Results: The performance of dengue IgG and IgM indirect ELISAs, using either a physical mixture of four EDIIIs or the single chimeric EDIII-T antigen, were comparable. Coating of a biotinylated version of the tetravalent antigen on streptavidin plates enhanced sensitivity without compromising specificity. Conclusions: The incorporation of the EDIIIs of the four DENV serotypes into a single chimeric antigen did not adversely affect assay outcome in indirect ELISAs. Oriented, rather than random, immobilization of the tetravalent antigen enhanced sensitivity of detection of anti-DENV antibodies with retention of 100% specificity.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to BioMed Central.
ID Code:109058
Deposited On:09 Mar 2018 12:10
Last Modified:09 Mar 2018 12:10

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