4.2 Article

Schistosoma mansoni:: Immunodiagnosis is improved by sodium metaperiodate which reduces cross-reactivity due to glycosylated epitopes of soluble egg antigen

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL PARASITOLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 2, Pages 106-112

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1006/expr.2000.4515

Keywords

Schistosoma mansoni; trematodes; immunodiagnosis; glycosylated epitopes; cross-reactivity; immunoblotting

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ELISA with soluble egg antigen (SEA) from Schistosoma mansoni is widely used in the diagnosis of schistosomiasis, but cross-reactivity with other intestinal helminths, overestimating the true prevalence, represents a great limitation. The role of glycoproteins of SEA in cross-reactions was investigated. SEA was oxidized with sodium metaperiodate (SMP) in ELISA and immunoblot. One hundred schistosomiasis-negative individuals sera were submitted to SMP-ELISA improving the specificity from 73% without SMP treatment to 97% with SMP. On the other hand, 94 S. mansoni-positive sera were evaluated showing that 99% were positive in ELISA either with or without SMP treatment, indicating the maintenance of high sensitivity under SMP treatment. By immunoblot, 24 sera from persons with schistosomiasis and 10 sera from schistosomiasis-free persons were assayed under reducing and nonreducing conditions with or without SMP, looking for specific infection markers and crossreactivity markers. Reactivity from positive sera showed that specific molecules were mainly low-molecular-mass antigens and seem to have predominant proteic epitopes. The unspecific molecules reacting with some schistosomiasis-negative individuals harboring other intestinal parasites (false-positive sera) were mostly larger than 60 kDa and seemed to be basically glycosylated. Glycosylated epitopes have an important role in cross-reaction and SMP can successfully be used to reduce the false reactivity of SEA with no decrease in sensitivity, especially in ELISA as an immunodiagnostic screening surveillance method, which is useful in areas of low schistosomiasis transmission. (C) 2000 Academic Press.

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