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Development of an assay for the quantification of type I collagen synthesis in the guinea pig
Journal article

Development of an assay for the quantification of type I collagen synthesis in the guinea pig

H Quasnichka, JF Tarlton, JM Anderson-Mackenzie, ME Billingham, AJ Bailey and AR Pickford
Journal of Immunological Methods, Vol.297(1-2), pp.133-141
02/2005

Abstract

Collagen type I synthesis Guinea pig PICP Competition ELISA SPR Veterinary Medicine
There is a need for a reliable assay for the quantification of collagen type I synthesis in the guinea pig, an important model for many connective tissue diseases. Procollagen type I C-terminal propeptide (PICP) is the established marker of type I collagen synthesis but, to date, no assay has been developed to measure PICP in guinea pig tissue extracts. A monoclonal antibody, known to cross-react with intact guinea pig procollagen type I (anti-PICP), was tested for its ability to bind soluble guinea pig PICP in crude skin extracts using a biosensor. Anti-PICP was immobilised to the surface of a sensor chip and antibody-antigen binding was detected using the phenomenon of surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The binding component in the SPR-immunoassay was identified as PICP by purification and N-terminal sequencing. Guinea pig PICP was purified from skin by gel filtration, ion exchange chromatography and lectin affinity chromatography. Purified PICP was then biotinylated and used with anti-PICP to develop a competition ELISA that was able to selectively and sensitively measure PICP in extracts of guinea pig connective tissue.

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