Publication: Surface plasmon resonance imaging for ABH antigen detection on red blood cells and in saliva: Secretor status-related ABO subgroup identification
Issued Date
2017-05-07
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ISSN
13645528
00032654
00032654
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-85021706221
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Analyst. Vol.142, No.9 (2017), 1471-1481
Suggested Citation
Patjaree Peungthum, Krisda Sudprasert, Ratthasart Amarit, Armote Somboonkaew, Boonsong Sutapun, Apirom Vongsakulyanon, Wuttigrai Seedacoon, Pimpun Kitpoka, Mongkol Kunakorn, Toemsak Srikhirin Surface plasmon resonance imaging for ABH antigen detection on red blood cells and in saliva: Secretor status-related ABO subgroup identification. Analyst. Vol.142, No.9 (2017), 1471-1481. doi:10.1039/c7an00027h Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/41882
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Title
Surface plasmon resonance imaging for ABH antigen detection on red blood cells and in saliva: Secretor status-related ABO subgroup identification
Abstract
© 2017 The Royal Society of Chemistry. Low antigenic expression of ABO subgroup system on red blood cell (RBC) is cause of discrepancy between forward and reverse blood typing in the standard agglutination technique. Neutralization agglutination is employed for verification of the detection of ABH substances in saliva. However, the neutralization technique is complicated, time-consuming and requires expertise. To overcome these drawbacks, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) imaging was developed for ABH antigen detection on RBCs and in saliva. An antibody array was designed to classify the ABO subgroups by anti-A, anti-B, and anti-H antibodies; the array was immobilized on a carboxymethyl-dextran sensor-surface. RBCs and saliva specimens from sixty-four donors were analysed by passing them over the antibody array, where the secretor status and blood group could be simultaneously identified. Consequently, the immobilized antibodies could specifically and quantitatively detect the ABH antigen on RBCs. Using the direct assay, the SPR signal of saliva detection was weaker than that of RBC detection. However, a sandwich assay with a mixture of anti-A, anti-B, and anti-H antibodies could efficiently enhance the signal. The sensor chip provided high specificity (cut-off at 100 to 175 micro refractive index units) and high precision at 0.06%-4.9% CV. The blood group results of the sixty-four donor specimens obtained by SPR agreed with the standard agglutination test with 100% accuracy. SPR could indicate different ABH antigen densities on the RBCs and nearly the same amounts of ABH substances in the saliva of strong and weak subgroups. Finally, we also demonstrated reduced assay time and fewer complications with the SPR imaging platform compared to the neutralization technique.