4.7 Article

Development of an indirect competitive ELISA for ciprofloxacin residues in food animal edible tissues

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 1087-1089

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf000091j

Keywords

ciprofloxacin; ELISA; food animal; residues

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An indirect competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed to detect ciprofloxacin (CPFX) in food animal edible tissues. CPFX was converted by an active ester method into conjugates CPFX-bovine serum-albumin (CPFX-BSA) and CPFX-human serum albumin (CPFX-HSA), which both allowed production of CPFX-specific rabbit antisera. In the ELISA, CPFX-HSA was coated onto the microtiter plate, followed by incubation with standard CPFX and anti-CPFX antibody. The indirect competitive ELISA revealed that the antisera have no cross-reactivity with penicillin, gentamicin, neomycin, sulfadiazine, and chlortetracycline. The antisera cross-reacted with enrofloxacin and norfloxacin about 69.8 and 44.6% as much as they did with CPFX. This ELISA was highly sensitive (0.32 ng/mL) to CPFX determination. Recovery of CPFX at 40 mug/kg was 75.58% in pork, 81.29% in chicken, and 84.30% in milk. The coefficients of variation varied from 3.7 to 9.2% over the range of CPFX concentrations studied. The linear detection range was between 1.6 and 1000 ng/mL. The results suggest that this ELISA is a specific, accurate, and convenient method for the detection of CPFX residues in food animal edible tissues.

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