Science and Research

Polyethylene glycol-conjugated alkylamines - A novel class of surfactants for the saturation of immunoassay solid phase surfaces

All solid-phase immunoassay techniques depend on so-called blocking reagents to suppress the background that is caused by unwanted adhesion of assay system components to the solid support. Commonly used blocking reagents based on biological materials bear severe inherent drawbacks such as heterogeneity and cross-reactivity, while synthetic alternatives often show insufficient background prevention. In this study, polyethylene glycol-conjugated alkylamines were synthesized via a versatile building block approach and were studied as novel blocking reagent candidates in immunoassays. The newly developed substances outperformed commonly used blocking reagents in two different ELISA setups, enabling both, excellent prevention of non-specific binding and particularly high assay sensitivity. This class of surfactants therefore may contribute significantly to the field of assay technology.

  • Fujimoto, N.
  • Bade, S.
  • Röckendorf, N.
  • Ramaker, K.
  • Frey, A.

Keywords

  • Amines/*chemistry
  • Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay/*methods
  • Humans
  • Immunoassay/*methods
  • Polyethylene Glycols/*chemistry
  • Surface-Active Agents/*chemistry
  • Blocking reagent
  • Non-specific binding
  • Sensitivity
  • Solid-phase immunoassay
  • synthetic blocking reagents”, EP 2 261 662 and US 8,501,199, assigned to the
  • Research Center Borstel.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2020.120741
Journal: Talanta
Pages: 120741 
Work Type: Original
Location: ARCN
Disease Area: General Lung and Other
Partner / Member: FZB
Access-Number: 32070605

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