Quantitative determination of CD4/CD8 molecules by a cell marker ELISA

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Abstract

Determination of percentages of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection is usually done by flow cytometric analysis. We compared a cell marker ELISA with flow cytometry for quantitation of CD4 and CD8 molecules on T lymphocytes, and correlated the values both with the number of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes and with clinical data. Results by cell marker ELISA (y) correlated well with those by flow cytometric analysis (x); r = 0.69, P <0.001 (y = 0.01x + 3.9) for CD4; r = 0.81, P <0.001 (y = 0.03x + 5.4) for CD8; n = 343. The ELISA detected changes in numbers of CD8 molecules on the cells earlier than flow cytometry recognized changes in CD8+ T-cell counts. The advantages of the ELISA are the small sample volume required (0.5 mL of blood), its internal standardization by a CD4+/CD8+ cell line, and its simple and fast performance. The cell marker ELISA appears to be an efficient alternative to flow cytometry.

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Franke, L., Nugel, E., Döcke, W. D., & Porstmann, T. (1994). Quantitative determination of CD4/CD8 molecules by a cell marker ELISA. Clinical Chemistry, 40(1), 38–42. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/40.1.38

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