Abstract

Development and characterization of guinea pig anti-insulin polyclonal antibody against a target-specific insulin antigen. In India, an insulin immunogenicity kit for detecting insulin antibodies (neutralizing Nab) is an unmet medical need for diabetic patient's routine diagnosis. Type 1 diabetics rely on insulin injections daily basis for survival; if the body develops anti-insulin antibodies and neutralizes the exogenous recombinant insulin, glucose control is lost, and the patient eventually dies. Antibodies are excellent diagnostic reagents due to the specificity and sensitivity they provide in recognizing specific and unique target antigens. The paper describes the use of insulin as a target antigen and the development of target (insulin) specific antibodies in guinea pigs for use as a positive control for immunogenicity kit validation. Anti-insulin polyclonal antibody was raised against insulin in the Dunkin Hartley guinea pigs host. Anti-insulin antibody titer of all bleeds from four animals was tested using an indirect ELISA assay format. All four animals responded to the target-specific antigen but only one animal (#4) responded with a high-affinity antibody titer. The hyperimmune sera were purified using a protein A column. The purified anti-insulin antibody was characterized through SDS Page and western blot. The specificity, reactivity, and antibody binding efficiency were confirmed through immunoassays. Guinea pig anti-insulin polyclonal antibody developed in this study showed good specificity, reactivity, and efficiency in the immunoassays. This paper describes the development and characterization of anti-insulin antibodies for use as a control in developing a user-friendly insulin immunogenicity kit.

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