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Enzyme immunoassay (EIA) to detect antigens

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    (English captions by Andrea Matsumoto, University of Michigan.) Many simple rapid diagnostic tests detect
    specific antigens in biological samples by
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    using an enzyme immunoassay.
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    The purpose of this animation is to explain
    how a prototype of this assay works.
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    The enzyme immunoassay can be done in a multi-well
    microtiter plate or on any other solid adherence
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    surface.
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    I will use the microtiter plate in this example
    so, lets take a closer look at one of the wells
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    of this assay to see what happens during the
    performance of the assay.
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    The plate is prepared to perform a particular
    assay by coating the wells with antibodies
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    that bind to the antigen of interest.
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    Then the wells are filled with the clinical
    sample, which could be a sample of serum,
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    respiratory secretions, cerebral spinal fluid,
    urine, or some other body fluid.
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    If the antigen is present in the sample, it
    will bind to the fixed antibodies.
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    In this example, the green shape represents
    the antigen of interest and the other shapes
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    represent other molecules in the sample.
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    However, note that only the specific, or green,
    antigen and none of the irrelevant molecules,
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    bind to the antibody-coated wells.
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    This accounts for the specificity of the test.
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    The wells are then washed out to remove any
    of the unattached molecules leaving the antigen
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    of interest stuck to the wells.
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    Now a second antibody, directed against another
    epitope on the target antigen is added.
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    These antibodies are conjugated covalently
    to an enzyme indicated by the yellow circle
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    at the FC portion of the second antibody.
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    They bind to the antigen that's fixed in
    the well and this provides a second level
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    of specificity for the assay.
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    The wells are washed again to remove any unbound
    antibodies and in the final step, a solution
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    of a colorgenic enzyme substrate is added.
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    The interaction of the substrate and the captured
    enzyme generates visible color in the
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    solution.
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    At the macroscopic level, the development
    of color indicates those samples that have
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    second antibody bound to the target antigen
    in the wells.
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    Thus, the wells that change color are the
    ones that contain the antigen of interest,
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    in other words, the positive results.
Title:
Enzyme immunoassay (EIA) to detect antigens
Description:

This short animation demonstrates detection of specific antigens using the enzyme immunoassay. This resource was developed by Cary Engleberg of the University of Michigan. It is part of a larger learning module about laboratory methods for clinical microbiology. The full learning module, editable animation, and video transcript are available at http://open.umich.edu/education/med/oernetwork/med/microbiology/clinical-microbio-lab/2009. Copyright 2009-2010, Cary Engleberg. This is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
02:06

English subtitles

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