Abstract

Abstract. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and toxin neutralization (TN) test were comparatively evaluated for determination of antibodies to tetanus toxin in sera of immunized guinea pigs and mice at different intervals. Tetanus specific IgG antibodies by ELISA were found in sera of guinea pigs at ninth day after inoculation and in mice sera at seventh day after inoculation when there were no TN antibodies. Two weeks after injection of mice with aluminium phosphate adsorbed tetanus toxoid, anti-tetanus toxin IgG levels determined by ELISA were 35 to 40 times higher than the TN titers. At 4 weeks, ELISA IgG antibody levels of mice and guinea pig sera were still statistically significantly higher than TN titers but with a good correlation between ELISA and TN titers (correlation coefficient of mice sera 0·89). Mice sera at 2 weeks after two doses of tetanus toxoid (interval between doses 30 days) and 8 weeks after a single injection showed similar ELISA and TN titers (P > 0·1). Guinea pig sera at 6 weeks after a single injection showed similar TN and ELISA titers (P > 0·4). During the course of immunization in mice and guinea pigs, low avidity and low affinity IgG antibodies start appearing early which are detected by ELISA but not by TN test. Therefore ELISA results on sera before 6 weeks of immunization determined against a hyper-immune reference serum do not give a true picture of TN levels.

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