Immunomagnetic separation of pathogenic organisms from environmental matrices.

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Abstract

One of the most difficult challenges in the analysis of environmental samples is to separate the organism of interest from a sample that is high in background debris. Immunomagnetic separation (IMS) is one technique that has been developed to accomplish this in a rapid and reliable assay.Immunomagnetic separation (or biomagnetic separation) involves a superparamag-netic, monodispersed, polystyrene microsphere that is coated with a specific ligand. When added to a heterogeneous target suspension, the microspheres bind to the desired target. Using a powerful magnet, the microsphere-target complex is then removed from the suspension. Many different targets of interest can be isolated with this technique, including fungal/bacterial cells or spores, protozoan parasites, cellular and subcellular material, proteins, and nucleic acid products. This wide range of application makes IMS one of the most versatile techniques available for the purification of target products from heterogeneous sample matrices.

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Yakub, G. P., & Stadterman-Knauer, K. L. (2004). Immunomagnetic separation of pathogenic organisms from environmental matrices. Methods in Molecular Biology (Clifton, N.J.), 268, 189–197. https://doi.org/10.1385/1-59259-766-1:189

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