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Article Abstract

This study aimed to establish a general and efficient dissociation technique for detecting antibodies in circulating immune complexes (CICs) in serum and to evaluate its clinical application. CICs were efficiently separated from specimens using polyethylene glycol double-precipitation. The best conditions for anti-HBs dissociation from HBsAg-ICs were a pH of 1.80, incubation at 15 °C for 5-10 min, and detection within 10 min after neutralization. The mean dissociation rate, reproducibility, mean dissociation recovery rate and specificity of the new technique were 64.3%, < 5.97, 95.4 and 100%, respectively. They had a favourable linear relationship (r = 0.9932), and the stability of the reagents exceeded 24 months, except the CIC antibody dissociation reagent (> 12 months). Conditions for the dissociation of other CICs tested were similar, but there were differences in the rate of antibody dissociation. Different HBV-M patterns had significantly different levels and rates of antibody dissociation from HBsAg-IC (P < 0.05), and the detection rates of the corresponding antibodies in HCV, core-anti-HCV core antibody (HCV-ICs), HIV P24-anti-HIV P24 antibody (HIV-ICs), insulin-anti-insulin antibody (INS-ICs) and thyroid globulin-anti-thyroid globulin antibody CICs (TG-ICs) were 34.8, 66.7, 20 and 14.3%, respectively. These data suggest that our CIC antibody dissociation technique is a good general pretreatment technique for the detection of antibodies after the precipitation, separation and dissociation of multiple CICs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6394588PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10238-018-0523-4DOI Listing

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