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*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Citations (Scopus)
7 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
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank Professor Matthew Guille, Dr Anna Noble, and their colleagues at the European Xenopus Resource Centre (EXRC) for kindly providing the X. laevis samples. The graphical abstract, Figs. 1, 2A and 4A were created using Biorender (http://www.Biorender.com) and exported with a publication license.

Funding

We thank Professor Matthew Guille, Dr Anna Noble, and their colleagues at the European Xenopus Resource Centre (EXRC) for kindly providing the X. laevis samples. The graphical abstract, Figs. 1, 2A and 4A were created using Biorender (http://www.Biorender.com) and exported with a publication license.

Keywords

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

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