Serological reactions in Microbiology Tatyana Ivakhnyuk The Department of Infectious Diseases and...

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Serological reactions in Microbiology Tatyana Ivakhnyuk The Department of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology with Course of Microbiology, Virology and Immunology Sumy State University Practical lesson 14 2010

Transcript of Serological reactions in Microbiology Tatyana Ivakhnyuk The Department of Infectious Diseases and...

Page 1: Serological reactions in Microbiology Tatyana Ivakhnyuk The Department of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology with Course of Microbiology, Virology and.

Serological reactions in Microbiology

Tatyana Ivakhnyuk

The Department of Infectious Diseases and Epidemiology with Course of Microbiology, Virology and Immunology

Sumy State University

Practical lesson 14

2010

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Serology• A science that attempts to detect signs of infection in a

patient’s serum such as Ab for a specific microbe• Serological tests based on Abs specifically binding to

Ag. – Ag of known identity will react with Ab in an unknown

serum sample.– Known Ab can be used to detect Ag in serum

• Ag-Ab reactions are visible by clumps, precipitates, color changes or release of radioactivity.

• The most effective tests have high specificity and sensitivity.

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Types of serological tests

1. Agglutination tests

2. Precipitation tests

3. Immunoelectrophoresis

4. Western blot tests

5. Complement fixation tests

6. Immunofluorescence testing

7. Immunoassays

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Characteristics of serological reactions– Reactants used– Visible and invisible reactions– Determination of titer– Hapten reactions– Serology

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Agglutination tests – Ab cross-links whole cell Ag, forming complexes that settle out and from visible clumps in the test chamber– blood type, some bacterial & viral diseases

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Agglutination– General reaction– Example in Widal test– Tube and slide agglutinations– Passive agglutination– Hemagglutination– Coombs test

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General reaction agglutination or Bacterial Agglutination

Components:1. Specific agglutination serum

(known Ab).2. Pure culture of bacteria

(unknown Ag).3. NaCl solution.

Used:In bacteriological method for

identification pure culture of bscteria.

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Table 1. Serological classification of some common Salmonella species.

Salmonella species Serological groupS. typhimurium B S. paratyphi C C1 S. enteriditis D S. anatum E

agglutination no agglutination?

Antibody specificity known (S. enteriditis)Salmonella species identity not known (?)Agglutinationreaction between antibody and particulate antigen

 EXAPLE OF BACTERIAL AGGLUTINATIONis the reaction between a particulate antigen and its specific antibodies

Positive Negative

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Bacterial agglutination

?

agglutination no agglutination

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Tube agglutinations test - Serological reaction in Serological method

Components:1. Serum from patient (unknown Ab).2. Specific diagnosticum – killed known pure culture of

bacteria (known Ag).3. NaCl solution.

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Principle– precipitation reaction converted into agglutination -

coating antigen onto the surface of carrier particles like red blood cells, latex, gelatin, bentonite• background clears

Examples of types– latex agglutination– co-agglutination– passive hemagglutination (treated red blood cells

made resistant)

Passive (indirect) agglutination

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Passive Hemagglutination Agglutination Test (PHAT)

Components:1. Pair serum from patient (unknown Ab).2. Specific erythrocyte diagnosticum – (known Ag on surface

erythrocytes from sheep ).3. NaCl solution.

Antigen

Dilution of serum from patient 1:20 1:40 1:80 1:160 1:320 Control

agglutination non agglutination

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Precipitation Tests

– One of the easiest of serological tests– Relies on fact that antigens and antibody mixed in

the proper proportion form large macromolecular complexes called precipitates

– Correct proportions are important to create precipitation

– Two techniques determine optimal antibody and antigen concentrations • Immunodiffusion• Immunelectrophoresis

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Ring Precipitation Test

Components:

1. Material from patient (unknown Ag).

2. Specific precipitation serum – (known Ab).

Used:

For express-diagnosis of infection disease (ex. Anthrax)

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Immune Testing

[INSERT FIGURE 17.7]

Precipitation test in gel

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Immune Testing

[INSERT FIGURE 17.8]

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Complement fixation

Components of the CFT:1. Serum from patient (unknown Ab).

2. Specific antigen (known Ag).

3. Complement.

4. Erythrocytes from sheep.

5. Hemolytic serum (in this serum present Ab

against Erythrocytes from sheep).

Experiment system

Indicator system

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Complement fixation: Principle

Complement fixation tests detect lysins- Ab that fix complement and can lyse target cells. Involves mixing test Ag and Ab with complement and then with sensitized sheep RBCs. If complement is fixed by the Ag-Ab, the RBCs remain intact and the test is positive. If RBCs are hemolyzed, specific Ab are lacking and the test is negative.

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Immunofluorescence testing

uses fluorescent Ab either directly or indirectly to visualize cells or cell aggregates that have reacted with the FAbs

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Labeling technique

Cell infected with Dengue virus

V. Cholerae

Immuno-fluorescence•Principle

– Use fluorescein isothiocyanate labeled-immunoglobulin to detect antigens or antibodies according to test systems

– Requires a fluorescent microscope

•Examples– Herpes virus IgM– Dengue virus– Rabies virus– Scrub and murine typhus

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Labeling techniqueTypes of immuno-fluorescence

•Direct immuno-fluorescence

– Used to detect antigen

•Indirect and sandwich immuno-fluorescence

– Antigen detection– Antibody detection

Direct FA Indirect FA Sandwich FA

1st

2nd

3rd

4th

Ag=

Ab==FITC-conjugated Ab

Steps

Legend

=FITC-conjAnti-Ig

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ELISAEnzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

(ELISA) can detect unknown Ag or Ab by direct or indirect means. A positive result is visualized when a colored product is released by an enzyme-substrate reaction.

– ELISAs

• Stands for enzyme-linked

immunosorbent assay

• Uses an enzyme as the label

– Reaction of the enzyme

with its substrate produces

a colored product

indicative of a positive test

• Most common form of ELISA

is used to detect the presence of

antibodies in serum

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ELISA

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ELISA – general skim

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Immunoelectrophoresis – migration of serum proteins in gel is combined with precipitation by Ab

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Western blot test – separates Ag into bands. After the gel is affixed to a blotter, it is reacted with a test specimen and developed by radioactivity or with dyes

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