Claire Walczak
January 1996
You can test whether
or not you have gotten an immune response to the peptide and how strong
that immune response is by doing ELISAs against peptide conjugated to
BSA. By conjugating to BSA, you will eliminate any signal for antibodies
generated to KLH during immunization.
Protocol:
A. Coupling Peptide
to BSA
You need:
- 1 ml of 2 mg/ml
BSA in 0.1 M NaHCO3.
- 1 ml of 0.2%
glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M NaHCO3.
- 0.5 ml peptide
(1 mg/ml in DMSO). Peptide can be added as a solid if soluble.
- Mix, adding glutaraldehyde
last. Peptide and BSA turn a little yellow even before adding glutaraldehyde.
- Incubate 90'
at 37 deg C.
- Add 0.1 volumes
of 0.1 M NaBH4 in 0.1 M NaHCO3. There will be some bubbling. Add same
amount of NaBH4 after 15'. Do a quick microfuge spin if there are
too many bubbles.
B. ELISA with Peptide
conjugated to BSA
- Coat 10 ug/ml
antigen (peptide conjugated to BSA) diluted in TBS (50 ul/well) ON
at 4 deg C.
- Remove antigen
and rinse wells 2Xs with TBST.
- Block 2 hr with
200 ul of 5% NFDM in TBST.
- Remove blocking
reagent and rinse wells 2Xs with TBST.
- Incubate in primary
antibody diluted in Blocking Buffer for 2 hr at RT. I do tripling
dilutions beginning at 1/10 (50 ul/well).
- Remove primary
antibody and rinse wells 4Xs with TBST.
- Incubate in secondary
antibody (1/5000 Goat anti-rabbit conjugated to AP) diluted in Blocking
Buffer for 1 hr at RT (50 ul/well).
- Remove secondary
antibody and rinse wells 4Xs with TBST.
- Rinse wells 2Xs
with 50 mM HCO3; 0.5 mM MgCl2, pH 10.
- Develop in 1
mg/ml p-Nitrophenyl phosphate in 50 mM HCO3; 0.5 mM MgCl2, pH 10 (50
ul/well).
- Read A410 in
ELISA reader.
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