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Measurement of eotaxin (CCL11) in induced sputum supernatants: validation and detection in asthma

Measurement of eotaxin (CCL11) in induced sputum supernatants: validation and detection in asthma
Measurement of eotaxin (CCL11) in induced sputum supernatants: validation and detection in asthma
Background Induced sputum is widely used in asthma research; however, for many mediators, the detection methods have not been validated.
Objective We sought to optimize the method of detection of eotaxin, an important chemokine acting through the CCR3 receptor on eosinophils, basophils, and TH2 cells.
Methods Induced sputum from normal and asthmatic subjects was processed with dithioerythritol (DTE) or PBS; recovery of eotaxin was assessed by means of ELISA before and after spiking with recombinant eotaxin. Furthermore, the effects of removing DTE by means of ultrafiltration or the addition of protease inhibitors and high-speed centrifugation on endogenous levels and spiking recovery of eotaxin were assessed.
Results Endogenous eotaxin was undetectable in DTE-processed samples, with a mean of only 30% (SD, 13%) spike recovery. DTE had no effect on the immunoassay capture antibody but dramatically reduced the detection of recombinant eotaxin. Removal of DTE from sputum before immunoassay did not improve detection, although it restored the recovery of a subsequent eotaxin spike. In contrast, PBS-processed sputum resulted in an eotaxin spike recovery of 101% (SD, 20%). Addition of protease inhibitors or high-speed centrifugation had no effect on eotaxin detection. By using this optimized protocol, eotaxin levels in PBS-processed sputum samples were found to be significantly increased in asthmatic sputum (P<.05).
Conclusion Measurement of eotaxin by means of immunoassay is adversely affected by DTE, possibly through irreversible denaturation of epitopes, which makes eotaxin undetectable by using the immunoassay antibody. Sputum samples should be processed into PBS for assessment of eotaxin, which is present at increased levels in asthmatic sputum.
eotaxin (ccl11), induced sputum, asthma, elisa, dithioerythritol dte, dithioerythritol, dtt, dithiothreitol, ecp, eosinophil cationic protein, pi, protease inhibitor
0091-6749
657-662
Hadjicharalambous, Chrystalleni
4659f794-57da-4a3b-9317-1011eab65f65
Dent, Gordon
73559f2a-168a-4f3d-b478-f3838e77132f
May, Richard D.
d09a8ca8-aa55-4f5d-8349-a1374d4b3944
Handy, Rachel L.C.
98e09f16-af44-4f5a-bfff-9b6beb4ab9a9
Anderson, Ian K.
d9ca65db-fce4-41cf-9539-3d6552a76783
Davies, Donna E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Djukanovic, Ratko
d9a45ee7-6a80-4d84-a0ed-10962660a98d
Hadjicharalambous, Chrystalleni
4659f794-57da-4a3b-9317-1011eab65f65
Dent, Gordon
73559f2a-168a-4f3d-b478-f3838e77132f
May, Richard D.
d09a8ca8-aa55-4f5d-8349-a1374d4b3944
Handy, Rachel L.C.
98e09f16-af44-4f5a-bfff-9b6beb4ab9a9
Anderson, Ian K.
d9ca65db-fce4-41cf-9539-3d6552a76783
Davies, Donna E.
7de8fdc7-3640-4e3a-aa91-d0e03f990c38
Djukanovic, Ratko
d9a45ee7-6a80-4d84-a0ed-10962660a98d

Hadjicharalambous, Chrystalleni, Dent, Gordon, May, Richard D., Handy, Rachel L.C., Anderson, Ian K., Davies, Donna E. and Djukanovic, Ratko (2004) Measurement of eotaxin (CCL11) in induced sputum supernatants: validation and detection in asthma. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 113 (4), 657-662. (doi:10.1016/j.jaci.2004.01.757).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background Induced sputum is widely used in asthma research; however, for many mediators, the detection methods have not been validated.
Objective We sought to optimize the method of detection of eotaxin, an important chemokine acting through the CCR3 receptor on eosinophils, basophils, and TH2 cells.
Methods Induced sputum from normal and asthmatic subjects was processed with dithioerythritol (DTE) or PBS; recovery of eotaxin was assessed by means of ELISA before and after spiking with recombinant eotaxin. Furthermore, the effects of removing DTE by means of ultrafiltration or the addition of protease inhibitors and high-speed centrifugation on endogenous levels and spiking recovery of eotaxin were assessed.
Results Endogenous eotaxin was undetectable in DTE-processed samples, with a mean of only 30% (SD, 13%) spike recovery. DTE had no effect on the immunoassay capture antibody but dramatically reduced the detection of recombinant eotaxin. Removal of DTE from sputum before immunoassay did not improve detection, although it restored the recovery of a subsequent eotaxin spike. In contrast, PBS-processed sputum resulted in an eotaxin spike recovery of 101% (SD, 20%). Addition of protease inhibitors or high-speed centrifugation had no effect on eotaxin detection. By using this optimized protocol, eotaxin levels in PBS-processed sputum samples were found to be significantly increased in asthmatic sputum (P<.05).
Conclusion Measurement of eotaxin by means of immunoassay is adversely affected by DTE, possibly through irreversible denaturation of epitopes, which makes eotaxin undetectable by using the immunoassay antibody. Sputum samples should be processed into PBS for assessment of eotaxin, which is present at increased levels in asthmatic sputum.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: eotaxin (ccl11), induced sputum, asthma, elisa, dithioerythritol dte, dithioerythritol, dtt, dithiothreitol, ecp, eosinophil cationic protein, pi, protease inhibitor

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 27082
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27082
ISSN: 0091-6749
PURE UUID: cd7f7ae6-b88f-4155-8caf-34087b108e62
ORCID for Donna E. Davies: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5117-2991
ORCID for Ratko Djukanovic: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6039-5612

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 27 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:36

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Contributors

Author: Chrystalleni Hadjicharalambous
Author: Gordon Dent
Author: Richard D. May
Author: Rachel L.C. Handy
Author: Ian K. Anderson
Author: Donna E. Davies ORCID iD

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