Avian glycan-specific IgM monoclonal antibodies for the detection and quantitation of type A and B haemagglutinins in egg-derived influenza vaccines

► Two Mabs which are of particular interest to detect and quantify HA in egg influenza vaccines were characterised. ► Two ELISAs were set up, one is strain specific, the other is a universal influenza ELISA. ► These ELISAs are of particular interest for the quantitation of HA in egg-grown pandemic a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of virological methods 2011-12, Vol.178 (1-2), p.129-136
Hauptverfasser: Legastelois, Isabelle, Chevalier, Michel, Bernard, Marie-Clotilde, de Montfort, Aymeric, Fouque, Martine, Pilloud, Alexandra, Serraille, Christelle, Devard, Nicolas, Engel, Olivier, Sodoyer, Régis, Moste, Catherine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:► Two Mabs which are of particular interest to detect and quantify HA in egg influenza vaccines were characterised. ► Two ELISAs were set up, one is strain specific, the other is a universal influenza ELISA. ► These ELISAs are of particular interest for the quantitation of HA in egg-grown pandemic and seasonal vaccines. Two IgM monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), Y6F5 and Y13F9, were selected during a screening of clones obtained immunising BALB/c mice with purified envelop proteins of the A/Sydney/5/97 (H3N2) IVR108 influenza strain. These MAbs recognised avian glycans on the haemagglutinin (HA) of the virus. This broad recognition allowed these MAbs to be used as enzyme-labelled secondary antibody reagents in a strain specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in combination with a capture MAb that recognised and allowed the quantitation of the strain specific HA protein present in an egg-produced influenza vaccine. Advantage was taken of these MAbs to develop a universal ELISA in which the MAbs were used both as capture antibody and as enzyme-labelled secondary antibody to detect and quantify the HA protein of any egg-derived influenza vaccine. These avian-glycan specific IgM MAbs may prove to be particularly useful for determining the HA concentration in monovalent egg-derived pandemic influenza vaccines, in which the HA concentration may be lower than 5μg/ml. The HA detection limit in the ELISA assays developed in this study was 1.9μg/ml, as opposed to the 5μg/ml quantitation limit generally accepted for the standard single-radial-immunodiffusion (SRID) assay, the approved technique for quantifying HA content in influenza vaccines. These ELISAs can also be used to quantify influenza HA formulated with emulsion-based or mineral salt adjuvants that could interfere with HA measurement by the SRID assay.
ISSN:0166-0934
1879-0984
DOI:10.1016/j.jviromet.2011.08.027