Congener-Independent Immunoassay
for Microcystins and Nodularins
Posted on 2001-11-16 - 00:00
Cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) (e.g., Microcystis and
Nodularia spp.) capable of producing toxic peptides are
found in fresh and brackish water worldwide. These toxins
include the microcystin (MC) heptapeptides (>60
congeners) and the nodularin pentapeptides (ca. 5
congeners). Cyanobacterial cyclic peptide toxins are
harmful to man, other mammals, birds, and fish. Acute
exposure to high concentrations of these toxins causes
liver damage, while subchronic or chronic exposure may
promote liver tumor formation. The detection of cyclic peptide
cyanobacterial toxins in surface and drinking waters has
been hampered by the low limits of detection required and
that the present routine detection is restricted to a few
of the congeners. The unusual β-amino acid ADDA (4E,6E-3-amino-9-methoxy-2,6,8-trimethyl-10-phenyldeca-4,6-dienoic acid) is present in most (>80%) of the known toxic
penta- and heptapeptide toxin congeners. Here, we
report the synthesis of two ADDA-haptens, the raising of
antibodies to ADDA, and the development of a competitive
indirect ELISA for the detection of microcystins and
nodularins utilizing these antibodies. The assay has a limit
of quantitation of 0.02−0.07 ng/mL (depending on which
congeners are present), lower than the WHO-proposed
guideline (1 ng/mL) for drinking water, irrespective of the
sample matrix (raw water, drinking water, or pure toxin in
PBS). This new ELISA is robust, can be performed
without sample preconcentration, detects toxins in
freshwater samples at lower concentrations than does
the protein phosphatase inhibition assay, and shows very
good cross-reactivity with all cyanobacterial cyclic
peptide toxin congeners tested to date (MC-LR, -RR, -YR,
-LW, -LF, 3-desmethyl-MC-LR, 3-desmethyl-MC-RR, and
nodularin).
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Fischer, Werner J.; Garthwaite, Ian; Miles, Christopher O.; Ross, Kathryn M.; Aggen, James B.; Chamberlin, A. Richard; et al. (2016). Congener-Independent Immunoassay
for Microcystins and Nodularins. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/es011182f