Elisa: From A Z
Elisa: From A Z
Elisa: From A Z
From A~Z
ELISA
ELISA (Enzyme-linked immuno-
sorbent assay) is one of
immunoassay method used to
detection of
1-Antibodies
2-Proteins
3-Peptides
4-Biomolecules
What is immunoassay?
ELISA KIT
Components of Kit
Pre-Coated, Stabilized 96-well Microtiter
Plate.
Sample Diluent
Standards and controls
Conjugated Detection Antibody
10X Wash Solution
Substrate
Stop Solution
Advantages of ELISA
Reagents are relatively cheap & have a long
shelf life
ELISA is highly specific and sensitive
No radiation hazards occur during labelling or
disposal of waste.
Easy to perform and quick procedures
Equipment can be inexpensive and widely
available.
ELISA can be used to a variety of infections.
Disadvantages of ELISA
Measurement of enzyme activity can be more complex
than measurement of activity of some type of
radioisotopes.
Enzyme activity may be affected by plasma
constituents.
Kits are commercially available, but not cheap
Very specific to a particular antigen. Won’t recognize
any other antigen
False positives/negatives possible, especially with
mutated/altered antigen
1-Direct ELISA
2-Indirect ELISA
3-Sandwich ELISA
4-Competitive ELISA
5-Ogives ELISA
The direct detection method uses a labeled primary
antibody that reacts directly with the antigen. Direct
detection can be performed with antigen that is directly
immobilized on the assay plate . Direct detection is not
widely used in ELISA but is quite common for
immunohistochemical staining of tissues and cells.
The indirect ELISA utilizes an unlabeled
primary antibody in conjunction with a
labeled secondary antibody.The
secondary antibody has specificity for
the primary antibody
Direct and Indirect ELISA
The sandwich measures the amount of antigen between two
layers of antibodies.
2. Washing
wash manually 3 times as follows:Empty the plate by inversion over a
sink. Tap the inverted plate against some layers of soft paper tissue to
remove residual liquid. Wash the plate by filling the wells by
immersion in buffer B. Leave on the table for 3 minutes. Empty the
plate as described above and repeat washing two more times.
2-A concentrated solution of non-interacting protein, such as bovine
serum albumin (BSA) or casein, is added to all plate wells.This step
is known as blocking,because the serum proteins block nonspecific
adsorption of other proteins to the plate.
3. Incubation with Test Samples.
100 μL of test sample or standard diluted in buffer is added
per well.
Cover the plate and incubate at room temperature for 2
hours.
7. Colour Development
100 μL of chromogenic substrate is added to each well.
Cover the plate and incubate for 15 minutes, or until a suitable
colour has developed. The plate should preferably be
protected against light during this incubation.
8. Stopping the Colour Development
Stop the reaction by adding 100 μL 0.5 M H2SO4 to each well.
9. Reading of Results
Read results directly through the bottom of the microwell
plate using an automated or semiautomated
photometer (ELISA-reader). The subtraction of the
absorbance at a reference wavelength (between 620 and
650 nm) is recommended.
Fundamental techniques
for performing ELISA
1. How to use a tip-exchange type pipette?
Fundamental techniques for
performing ELISA
5. Structure of antibody-coated microplate and
treatment
Fundamental techniques for
performing ELISA
6. How to wash a microplate
7-HOW TO TREAT WITH THE REAGENTS?
1-Sample treatment.
3-Stability of assay samples.
2-Infleunce of humidity and air stream.
Important points in performing ELISA and
improvement of assay performance
Serum or plasma
sampling
In general, we recommend using
When getting
heparin is most often used as an anti-
coagulant
Use of fluoride must be avoided because fluoride
ion is a potent inhibitor of peroxidase.
An important phenomenon with frozen plasma is
that an insoluble substance (fibrin) will be formed
when thawed. In this case, the sample must be
mixed and centrifuged, then the insoluble cluster
flowing in the plasma should be taken out by a thin
wire needle sharply bent at an end. If such fibrin
remains in the sample, it may clog the tip of a
pipette and influences assay variability
Hemolysis and Lipemia
pH Of the sample
Serum or plasma, when fresh, shows
pH near neutral, however, it very
quickly goes to alkaline more than pH 8
by losing CO2.
Avoid sunlight
3-infeluence of humidity and air stream