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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Group-selective immunoassay for the detection of morphine in urine.

A new competitive inhibition immunoassay (group-selective immunoassay; GSI) has been developed to detect free morphine in urine with the Fab' fragments of monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) (1B(12)F(9)B(4), IgG(1), kappa, K(aff) = 9.66 x 10(10)M(-1)). At the first assay step, microtiter plates were coated with morphine-ovalbumin (M-6-S-OVA), in which free amino acids were protected by a glutaraldehyde cross-linking modification. The modification did not essentially influence the antibody-binding capacity of the immunosorbent. At the second assay step, anti-morphine MAbs' Fab' fragments, in which free amino groups were biotinylated by N-hydrosuccinimide-biotin ester, were bound to chemically modified immunosorbent. The biotin residues were then detected by the streptavidin-peroxide conjugate. This method has a sensitivity of 3.50 x 10(-15) mol/L using very little volume of sample, covering up to almost 1.20 x 10(-11) mol/L of standard concentration of morphine with good reproducibility. Standard curve prepared in urine indicated a good correlation between the concentration of morphine and the value of OD (y = 1/ax + b; r = 0.99939257, S = 0.01138127). Coefficients of variation for this immunoassay were 1.41 approximately 6.61% within-a-day assay and 2.31 approximately 8.99% between days assay. The recoveries were 94 approximately 101.4% from negative urine and 95.2 approximately 107.5% from positive urine samples, respectively. This method has application as a specific screen for morphine in drug abusers, to study the metabolism of the drug in the body, or to screen the monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) against morphine.[1]

References

  1. Group-selective immunoassay for the detection of morphine in urine. Yang, T.B., Yuan, Y.H., Zhong, P., Qu, L.N., Yang, B., Li, Y.H., Ju, G. Hybrid. Hybridomics (2004) [Pubmed]
 
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