Development of an automated chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for the measurement of soluble C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (sCLEC-2) and molecular forms of sCLEC-2 measured in patient plasma.
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Soluble CLEC-2 is anticipated to have various clinical applications as a novel biomarker for in vivo platelet activation, assessable using plasma obtained through routine sampling procedures. While sCLEC-2 has been measured using ELISA, we have developed a highly sensitive chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay (CLEIA) reagent that can yield results in approximately 19 minutes. This study aims to assess its fundamental performance and explore the molecular forms of sCLEC-2 measured in patient samples. We examined the sensitivity, precision, linearity, influence of endogenous substances, residual platelets, as well as the correlation with the ELISA method, for the sCLEC-2 CLEIA reagent. The CLEIA method demonstrated sufficient sensitivity for levels observed in healthy donors, and its basic performance was satisfactory. It exhibited a strong correlation with the previously described ELISA method, with reference ranges that did not significantly differ from the ELISA data. The sCLEC-2 reference range for males was significantly higher than that for females. Since it is known that sCLEC-2 exists in shed form and microparticle form, we investigated molecular forms of sCLEC-2 measured by the CLEIA in in vitro-activated platelets and in patients' plasma using gel filtration. It is considered that the CLEIA method shows significantly stronger reactivity with the shed form compared to the microparticle form. Studies using gel filtration of patient samples also suggest that the shed form is being primarily measured. The sCLEC-2 CLEIA reagent exhibits robust performance and is promising for clinical applications.
期刊介绍:
Platelets is an international, peer-reviewed journal covering all aspects of platelet- and megakaryocyte-related research.
Platelets provides the opportunity for contributors and readers across scientific disciplines to engage with new information about blood platelets. The journal’s Methods section aims to improve standardization between laboratories and to help researchers replicate difficult methods.
Research areas include:
Platelet function
Biochemistry
Signal transduction
Pharmacology and therapeutics
Interaction with other cells in the blood vessel wall
The contribution of platelets and platelet-derived products to health and disease
The journal publishes original articles, fast-track articles, review articles, systematic reviews, methods papers, short communications, case reports, opinion articles, commentaries, gene of the issue, and letters to the editor.
Platelets operates a single-blind peer review policy. Authors can choose to publish gold open access in this journal.