The invention relates to a method for assaying a plurality of analytes such as e.g. metabolites and antigens in biological and other liquid samples by means of analytical elements, especially lateral-flow test strips, flow-through membrane systems (flow-through tests), wells/cavities of microtitre plates or test tubes. Application areas of the invention are principally medical diagnostics, the pharmaceutical industry and protection of the environment.
Analytical elements, such as e.g. immuno-chromatographical test systems for assaying numerous analytes in biological liquids or for assaying pollutants in environmental samples have been known for years and have proved very successful in practice. They work mainly according to the sandwich or competition principle (in the case of small analytes). The use of affinity assays, e.g. immunoassays, receptor and DNA assays is becoming ever increasingly important for clinical and numerous other applications. In this case, very different analytes are assayed in different sample matrices (e.g. urine, saliva, tear fluid, sweat, liquor or blood). There is still one problem at the moment, that the dilution of at least part of the said matrices (e.g. urine) is not constant; therefore, in the course of the day, definite concentration changes occur, which influence the corresponding analyte measured value. However, endogenously formed substances are described for individual body matrices, with the help of which the corresponding dilution can be corrected; therefore, the system can be calibrated (Federal health sheet—health research—health protection 5 2005; Norpoth K, Heger M (1984), Creatinine as a reference variable for indicating substance concentrations in the urea. In: Hentschler D, Lehnert G (Hrsg) Biological Agent Tolerance Values (BAT values), occupational medical toxicological grounds, Vol. 1, Commission for the testing of health-hazardous biological agents of the DFG). Creatinine in the sample matrix urine is an example of these substances acting as endogenous calibrators. In the case of spontaneous urine samples of healthy test subjects, concentration fluctuations between 4 and 28 mmol of creatinine per litre of urine are quite normal (Fundamentals of Laboratory Testing: Urine, Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Mannheim, Germany). If these values are compared with the average value (15 mmol/l) of the 24 hour urine, it becomes clear that a dilution by the factor 3.5 is in the normal range, but the urine can also be concentrated by the factor 2. Based on an analyte to be determined in the sample matrix urine, this means: the measured value determined has to be corrected accordingly, so therefore a double determination (endogenous calibrator and analyte) followed by a calculation is necessary. In practice, this means carrying out two separate tests. In the case of urine, the creatinine concentration is determined first of all via an enzymatic cascade, and the volume of the analyte in the second stage (usually immuno-chemically). This approach is both time-consuming and labour-intensive.
Therefore, the object of the invention was to find new solutions for test systems that determine various analytes in sample matrices with concentrations that are not constant.
The invention is achieved according to the claims. It relates to a method for assaying a plurality of analytes such as e.g. metabolites and antigens in biological or other liquid samples by means of analytical elements, especially lateral-flow test strips, flow-through membrane systems (flow-through test), wells/cavities of microtitre plates or test tubes, the method being based on coupled enzyme and affinity reactions and implemented by means of endogenous calibrators.
The main idea consists of coupling enzyme and immunochemical methods and including the concentration of endogenous calibrators of the corresponding sample matrix in the total result, the analyte concentration being corrected automatically by the system achieved. With this combined enzymatic/immunological test system, body fluids are incubated with an enzyme mix (reaction 1), when the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) produced with incubation through conversion of the endogenous calibrator is used partly or completely in a second, now immune reaction (reaction 2) with the same body fluid for signal formation through a marker enzyme. This signal is picked up and compared or offset with the signal of the H2O2 produced in the first reaction.
The two reactions of the method can be carried out simultaneously or sequentially and can also be carried out in one compartment or in 2 separate compartments. Preferably lateral-flow test strips, flow-through membrane systems (flow-through test), wells/cavities of microtitre plates or test tubes are used as compartments. According to the invention, the signal is picked up visually (naked eye), colourimetrically, through fluorescence or electrochemically.
The evaluation is made by means of nomogram, comparator (reference strip), reader or comparison with the naked eye, when, in the case of the latter, the number of signals generated enzymatically by means of a calibrator (e.g. test lines or test dots) is set in the ratio to the number of signals generated immunologically by means of analyte (e.g. test lines or test dots).
With the new method, body fluids, including urine, saliva, tear liquid, sweat, liquor or blood can be investigated. Creatinine, glucose, glucose-6-phosphate, lactate, glutamate, aspartate, cholesterol, pyruvate, urea and triglycerides in particular are used as endogenous calibrators. Marker enzymes are preferably peroxidases and oxidases. Preferably, an enzyme mix is used that reacts with the endogenous calibrator present in the body fluid concerned with the formation of H2O2. For example, in the case of the body fluid urine, when using creatinine as the endogenous calibrator, a mix of creatininase, creatinase and sarcosin oxidase is used. However, if glucose is used as the endogenous calibrator in the same sample matrix, glucose oxidase is used to generate the H2O2.
Surprisingly, it was found that with such a combined system in sample matrices with non-constant concentrations, a very wide range of analytes can be determined directly in a reliable manner, i.e. with the corresponding dilution correction. The invention is now explained in more detail below with the help of illustrations.
The urine sample (200 μl) is divided into 2 equal portions (A and B). Part A is introduced into a test tube (see
Commercial membrane-coated microtitre plates (96 wells) are used for the macrodot assays (FIG. 5/1). Preferably the membrane material consists of PVDF or nitrocellulose. The dot model used depends on the application concerned; examples are illustrated in FIG. 5/2. Preferably, 5 dots are used (FIG. 5/3), when the centre dot functions as a control dot as a rule. The outer dots can be used both for assaying different analytes and for the dilution corrections of individual analyte concentrations. The example to be described focuses on the assay of individual analytes (FABP) with simultaneous correction of the dilution of the sample matrix used (urine). 4 dots (see
100 μl reaction mixture is added to each well and incubated at room temperature (20-25° C.) every 60 minutes. FABP is added to be able to illustrate the effects to be described more clearly. Only with the presence of FABP can the following complex form on the catcher antibody: Catcher antibody/FABP/Anti-FABP antibody horse-radish peroxidase conjugate. The plate is then washed 4 times (0.1 M Na—P buffer, pH 7.2) and 50 μl of the following mixture is added to each well:
1 part Part A
1 part H2O2-free, locally tightly limited precipitating peroxidase substrate.
Incubation of at least 5 minutes at room temperature follows. In this case, at the positions at which the horse-radish peroxidase is bound, the liquid, colourless substrate is converted into a blue precipitate, when the volume of the precipitate, i.e. the signal generated, depends on the analyte concentration and the volume of endogenous calibrator (glucose) that is used to generate the H2O2 necessary for the reaction. The plate is then again washed 4 times (as above). After drying, the evaluation is made using an imaging process, for example.
Example 3 describes the application of flow-though macrodot assays for assaying analytes with simultaneous correction by means of endogenous calibrators for various sample matrices. In this case, 7 dots are applied to a flow-through membrane system first of all (cf.
When this test system is used, the sample is pre-incubated first of all in a test tube that contains the necessary enzyme mix to convert the endogenous calibrator concerned or the corresponding individual enzyme and also horse-radish perioxidase-coupled anti-analyte antibodies. This reaction mix is then applied to the test field of the flow-through membrane system. If analyte is present in the sample, the analyte-horse-radish peroxidase-coupled anti-analyte antibody binds to the corresponding catcher antibodies (dots ‘1 ’ to ‘4 ’). Because of the different catcher antibody concentrations, a saturation takes place in the direction of dot ‘4 ’. The product formed through conversion of the endogenous calibrator in the reaction mix (preferably H2O2) now initiates the conversion of the H2O2-free, locally tightly limited precipitating peroxidase substrate previously immobilised in each dot from its colourless preliminary stage to a blue/violet precipitate. In this case, the precipitate volume depends on the peroxidase present locally and the H2O2 concentration, for example.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2006 021 645.8 | May 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/DE2007/000824 | 5/7/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/21/2009 |