Luminescentoxygenchannelingassay(LOCITM): sensitive,broadlyapplicablehomogeneous immunoassaymethod

1996 
Luminescent oxygen channeling assay (LOCITM) is a homogeneous immunoassay method capable of rapid, quantitative determination of a wide range of analytes-including high and very low concentrations of large and small molecules, free (unbound) drugs, DNA, and specific 1gM. Assays have been carried out in serum and in lysed blood. Reliable detection of 1.25 tUfL thyrotropin (TSH) and 5 ngfL hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) corresponds to detection limits -3-- and -20-fold lower, respectively, than those of the best commercially available assays. An assay of chorionic gonadotropin is capable of quantification over a 106-fold range of concentrations without a biphasic response. Latex particle pairs are formed in the assay through specific binding interactions by sequentially combining the sample and two reagents. One particle contains a photosensitizer, the other a chemiluminescer. Irradiation causes photosensitized formation of singlet oxygen, which migrates to a bound particle and activates the chemiluminescer, thereby initiating a delayed luminescence emission. Assay times range from 1 to 25 mm.
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