1. Factors Affecting the Passive Hemagglutination Titration: Dilution Loops, Titration Trays, Vibration, Diluents
- Author
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Arthur A. Hirata, Dennis S. Grant, and Laurence R. Draper
- Subjects
Antiserum ,Chromatography ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,Hemagglutination ,biology ,Serial dilution ,Chemistry ,Serum albumin ,General Medicine ,Diluent ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Dilution ,Titer ,Tray ,biology.protein ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics - Abstract
Serial dilution with Takatsy loops resulted in exaggerated passive hemagglutination titers with most of the anti-bovine serum albumin sera tested. It appears that certain types of agglutinins adhere to the loop surface and are released only gradually. This adherence, or carry-over effect, was prevented by presoaking loops in gelatin or gelatin-rabbit serum-albumin solutions. Hemolysins did not adhere to loops. In general, hemagglutination reactions performed on plastic trays gave higher titers than those performed in glass test tubes. The quality of the hemagglutination pattern was dependent to a great extent on the type of plastic tray used. As much as a 100-fold difference in titers was obtained depending on the composition of the antiserum diluent. The increase in vibration, in terms of linear displacement (approximately twofold), resulted in an eightfold decrease in titers.
- Published
- 1969
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