Performance benchmarking microplate-immunoassays for quantifying target-specific cysteine oxidation reveals their potential for understanding redox-regulation and oxidative stress

Ahmet Tuncay, Daniel R. Crabtree, David J. Muggeridge, Holger Husi, James N. Cobley (Lead / Corresponding author)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)
93 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

The antibody-linked oxi-state assay (ALISA) for quantifying target-specific cysteine oxidation can benefit specialist and non-specialist users. Specialists can benefit from time-efficient analysis and high-throughput target and/or sample n-plex capacities. The simple and accessible “off-the-shelf” nature of ALISA brings the benefits of oxidative damage assays to non-specialists studying redox-regulation. Until performance benchmarking establishes confidence in the “unseen” microplate results, ALISA is unlikely to be widely adopted. Here, we implemented pre-set pass/fail criteria to benchmark ALISA by robustly evaluating immunoassay performance in diverse biological contexts. ELISA-mode ALISA assays were accurate, reliable, and sensitive. For example, the average inter-assay CV for detecting 20%- and 40%-oxidised PRDX2 or GAPDH standards was 4.6% (range: 3.6–7.4%). ALISA displayed target-specificity. Immunodepleting the target decreased the signal by ∼75%. Single-antibody formatted ALISA failed to quantify the matrix-facing alpha subunit of the mitochondrial ATP synthase. However, RedoxiFluor quantified the alpha subunit displaying exceptional performance in the single-antibody format. ALISA discovered that (1) monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation amplified PRDX2-specific cysteine oxidation in THP-1 cells and (2) exercise increased GAPDH-specific cysteine oxidation in human erythrocytes. The “unseen” microplate data were “seen-to-be-believed” via orthogonal visually displayed immunoassays like the dimer method. Finally, we established target (n = 3) and sample (n = 100) n-plex capacities in ∼4 h with 50–70 min hands-on time. Our work showcases the potential of ALISA to advance our understanding of redox-regulation and oxidative stress.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)252-265
Number of pages14
JournalFree Radical Biology and Medicine
Volume204
Early online date14 May 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2023

Keywords

  • ALISA
  • Cysteine
  • Development
  • Exercise
  • Immunology
  • Oxidative stress
  • Redox regulation

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