Abstract

Determination of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) in human cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to study blood–brain barrier impairment and immune cell migration in inflammatory neurological diseases recently became a matter of major interest. Regularly, MMP-9 was determined qualitatively or semi-quantitatively by zymography (gelatin gel electrophoresis) or quantitatively by enzyme immunoassay (EIA). As yet, it was not possible by either method to detect MMP-9 in CSF of controls (patients without pathologically increased CSF parameters). We developed an ultrasensitive two-side enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) which allows for the first time to measure reliably MMP-9 concentrations in CSF of controls. This ELISA uses a monoclonal as capture and a polyclonal as detector antibody. The detection limit of the assay is below 10 pg/ml and the assay range is 15–2000 pg/ml. Intra-assay precision is 2.5% for low and 3.7% for high, inter-assay precision is 11% for low and 10.7% for high values, respectively. The determination of the MMP-9 concentration in 50 control CSF gave the following results: range, 22–146 pg/ml; median, 76 pg/ml. The measurement of native and recombinant MMP-9 was carried out with three commercially available ELISAs, most widely employed in MMP-9 research, and compared to the newly developed one. All ELISAs recognize recombinant MMP-9 by factors of 5–20 less sensitively than native MMP-9.

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