Improved ELISA to measure thymosin alpha 1: comparison of whole and absorbed antisera.
Wada. S S; Naylor. P H PH; Naylor. C W CW; Goldstein. A L AL
Key Findings
- The new ELISA uses an antibody absorbed with a synthetic fragment of thymosin‑alpha‑1, improving detection.
- Measured thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels are 3‑5 times higher with the absorbed antibody, indicating greater sensitivity.
- Both the new and old assays recover added peptide accurately, but the absorbed antibody offers better specificity.
Practical Outcomes
- If you want to track your own thymosin‑alpha‑1 levels, look for labs using the absorbed‑antiserum ELISA for more reliable results. The study doesn’t change dosing or health protocols, just the accuracy of measurement.
Summary
Scientists made a better lab test (ELISA) to measure the peptide thymosin‑alpha‑1 in blood, using a specially treated antibody that gives clearer, higher readings than the older method.
Abstract
An improved microELISA to measure thymosin alpha 1 (T alpha 1) is described which uses a rabbit antibody against T alpha 1 that has been absorbed with a synthetic C-14 fragment of T alpha 1. This assay is compared to the previous assay which used the whole antisera. The antibodies to T alpha 1 are preincubated with the standard or human sera overnight at 4 degrees C, then incubated for an additional 24 h in microtiter plates coated with T alpha 1. Using the whole antiserum, the average T alpha 1 level was 2480 +/- 1110 (mean +/- S.D.) pg/ml by ELISA and 2360 +/- 870 pg/ml by radioimmunoassay (RIA) in eight different samples of human cord sera. Using the N-specific absorbed antiserum the mean T alpha 1 level was 11,800 +/- 4800 pg/ml by ELISA and 10,600 +/- 5200 pg/ml by RIA. Recoveries of exogenously added T alpha 1 are complete (109 +/- 25% for whole and 108 +/- 15% for absorbed antisera). The absorbed antiserum has an increased affinity for the amino acid terminal region of T alpha 1 and the T alpha 1 values by use of absorbed antisera are significantly higher (3-5 x) than those measured using the whole antisera. Thus, the absorbed antisera produces an ELISA which is more sensitive and specific for serum thymosin alpha 1.
Study Information
pubmed
1988
10.1016/0192-0561(88)90002-1
10
11