AI Article Synopsis

  • Antigen detection assays are crucial for environmental monitoring and disease diagnostics, particularly focusing on emerging viral threats like Ebolavirus.
  • Researchers have successfully developed monoclonal affinity reagent sandwich assays (MARSAs) using llama single domain antibodies targeting the nucleoprotein (NP) of various Ebolavirus strains.
  • The study concludes that the conserved C-terminal domain of Ebolavirus NP can effectively anchor antibodies, facilitating the rapid creation of sensitive immunoassays, making it a promising target for future application in disease detection.

Article Abstract

Background: Antigen detection assays can play an important part in environmental surveillance and diagnostics for emerging threats. We are interested in accelerating assay formulation; targeting the agents themselves to bypass requirements for a priori genome information or surrogates. Previously, using in vitro affinity reagent selection on Marburg virus we rapidly established monoclonal affinity reagent sandwich assay (MARSA) where one recombinant antibody clone was both captor and tracer for polyvalent nucleoprotein (NP). Hypothesizing that the closely related Ebolavirus genus may share the same Achilles' heel, we redirected the scheme to see whether similar assays could be delivered and began to explore their mechanism.

Methods And Findings: In parallel we selected panels of llama single domain antibodies (sdAb) from a semi-synthetic library against Zaire, Sudan, Ivory Coast, and Reston Ebola viruses. Each could perform as both captor and tracer in the same antigen sandwich capture assay thereby forming MARSAs. All sdAb were specific for NP and those tested required the C-terminal domain for recognition. Several clones were cross-reactive, indicating epitope conservation across the Ebolavirus genus. Analysis of two immune shark sdAb revealed they also targeted the C-terminal domain, and could be similarly employed, yet were less sensitive than a comparable llama sdAb despite stemming from immune selections.

Conclusions: The C-terminal domain of Ebolavirus NP is a strong attractant for antibodies and enables sensitive sandwich immunoassays to be rapidly generated using a single antibody clone. The polyvalent nature of nucleocapsid borne NP and display of the C-terminal region likely serves as a bountiful affinity sink during selections, and a highly avid target for subsequent immunoassay capture. Combined with the high degree of amino acid conservation through 37 years and across wide geographies, this domain makes an ideal handle for monoclonal affinity reagent driven antigen sandwich assays for the Ebolavirus genus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3618483PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0061232PLOS

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