학술논문

Development and validation of an isoform-independent monoclonal antibody–based ELISA for measurement of lipoprotein(a)
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Lipid Research. 63(8)
Subject
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Bioengineering
Biotechnology
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Apolipoproteins A
Apoprotein(a)
Chromatography
Liquid
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Epitopes
Humans
Lipoprotein(a)
Protein Isoforms
Tandem Mass Spectrometry
lipoprotein(a)
monoclonal antibody
isoform
kringle
cardiovascular disease
aortic stenosis
metabolism
therapy
LPA-KIV9
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical biochemistry and metabolomics
Language
Abstract
The study aims were to develop a new isoform-independent enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) for the measurement of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], validate its performance characteristics, and demonstrate its accuracy by comparison with the gold-standard ELISA method and an LC-MS/MS candidate reference method, both developed at the University of Washington. The principle of the new assay is the capture of Lp(a) with monoclonal antibody LPA4 primarily directed to an epitope in apolipoprotein(a) KIV2 and its detection with monoclonal antibody LPA-KIV9 directed to a single antigenic site present on KIV9. Validation studies were performed following the guidelines of the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments and the College of American Pathologists. The analytical measuring range of the LPA4/LPA-KIV9 ELISA is 0.27-1,402 nmol/L, and the method meets stringent criteria for precision, linearity, spike and recovery, dilutability, comparison of plasma versus serum, and accuracy. Method comparison with both the gold-standard ELISA and the LC-MS/MS method performed in 64 samples with known apolipoprotein(a) isoforms resulted in excellent correlation with both methods (r=0.987 and r=0.976, respectively). Additionally, the variation in apolipoprotein(a) size accounted for only 0.2% and 2.2% of the bias variation, respectively, indicating that the LPA4/LPA-KIV9 ELISA is not affected by apolipoprotein(a) size polymorphism. Peptide mapping and competition experiments demonstrated that the measuring monoclonal antibodies used in the gold-standard ELISA (a-40) and in the newly developed ELISA (LPA-KIV9) are directed to the same epitope, 4076LETPTVV4082, on KIV9. In conclusion, no statistically or clinically significant bias was observed between Lp(a) measurements obtained by the LPA4/LPA-KIV9 ELISA and those obtained by the gold-standard ELISA or LC-MS/MS, and therefore, the methods are considered equivalent.