International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2023)

Sandwich ELISA for the Quantification of Nucleocapsid Protein of SARS-CoV-2 Based on Polyclonal Antibodies from Two Different Species

  • Maja Mladenovic Stokanic,
  • Ana Simovic,
  • Vesna Jovanovic,
  • Mirjana Radomirovic,
  • Bozidar Udovicki,
  • Maja Krstic Ristivojevic,
  • Teodora Djukic,
  • Tamara Vasovic,
  • Jelena Acimovic,
  • Ljiljana Sabljic,
  • Ivana Lukic,
  • Ana Kovacevic,
  • Danica Cujic,
  • Marija Gnjatovic,
  • Katarina Smiljanic,
  • Marija Stojadinovic,
  • Jelena Radosavljevic,
  • Dragana Stanic-Vucinic,
  • Marijana Stojanovic,
  • Andreja Rajkovic,
  • Tanja Cirkovic Velickovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25010333
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
p. 333

Abstract

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In this study, a cost-effective sandwich ELISA test, based on polyclonal antibodies, for routine quantification SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid (N) protein was developed. The recombinant N protein was produced and used for the production of mice and rabbit antisera. Polyclonal N protein-specific antibodies served as capture and detection antibodies. The prototype ELISA has LOD 0.93 ng/mL and LOQ 5.3 ng/mL, with a linear range of 1.52–48.83 ng/mL. N protein heat pretreatment (56 °C, 1 h) decreased, while pretreatment with 1% Triton X-100 increased analytical ELISA sensitivity. The diagnostic specificity of ELISA was 100% (95% CI, 91.19–100.00%) and sensitivity was 52.94% (95% CI, 35.13–70.22%) compared to rtRT-PCR (Ct < 40). Profoundly higher sensitivity was obtained using patient samples mostly containing Wuhan-similar variants (Wuhan, alpha, and delta), 62.50% (95% CI, 40.59 to 81.20%), in comparison to samples mostly containing Wuhan-distant variants (Omicron) 30.00% (6.67–65.25%). The developed product has relatively high diagnostic sensitivity in relation to its analytical sensitivity due to the usage of polyclonal antibodies from two species, providing a wide repertoire of antibodies against multiple N protein epitopes. Moreover, the fast, simple, and inexpensive production of polyclonal antibodies, as the most expensive assay components, would result in affordable antigen tests.

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