Quantitation of reduced IL-33 levels in human serum: Mitigating interference from endogenous binding partners

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Abstract

Aim: IL-33 is a potential therapeutic target but commercially available assays for the quantitation of systemic IL-33 have poor reliability. Results: In commercial IL-33 kits, interference from endogenous binding partners (e.g., soluble ST2) causes under-quantitation. Mitigating this required acid dissociation and addition of the detection reagent simultaneously with the capture step. This enabled detection of total, reduced (active) levels of IL-33 in human serum (LLOQ 6.25 pg/ml). Conclusion: Acid treatment of serum samples dissociates IL-33 from endogenous binding partners, increasing soluble ST2 tolerance to >1000 ng/ml. The modified method was specific for reduced endogenous IL-33. Analysis of over 300 samples from individuals with and without asthma and with different smoking status revealed no difference in serum IL-33.

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Zylstra, J., Partridge, M. A., & Sumner, G. (2021). Quantitation of reduced IL-33 levels in human serum: Mitigating interference from endogenous binding partners. Bioanalysis, 13(23), 1751–1760. https://doi.org/10.4155/bio-2021-0172

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