About: Suspension array technology is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 52 publications have been published within this topic receiving 3426 citations.
TL;DR: The FlowMetrix System is a multiplexed data acquisition and analysis platform for flow cytometric analysis of microsphere-based assays that performs simultaneous measurement of up to 64 different analytes.
Abstract: The FlowMetrixTM System is a multiplexed data acquisition and analysis platform for flow cytometric analysis of microsphere-based assays that performs simultaneous measurement of up to 64 different analytes The system consists of 64 distinct sets of fluorescent microspheres and a standard benchtop flow cytometer interfaced with a personal computer containing a digital signal processing board and Windows95®-based software Individual sets of microspheres can be modified with reactive components such as antigens, antibodies, or oligonucleotides, and then mixed to form a multiplexed assay set The digital signal-processing hardware and Windows95-based software provide complete control of the flow cytometer and perform real-time data processing, allowing multiple independent reactions to be analyzed simultaneously The system has been used to perform qualitative and quantitative immunoassays for multiple serum proteins in both capture and competitive inhibition assay formats The system has also been used to perform DNA sequence analysis by multiplexed competitive hybridization with 16 different sequence-specific oligonucleotide probes
TL;DR: Specific applications of xMAP technology for nucleic acid detection are reviewed in the areas of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping, genetic disease screening, gene expression profiling, HLA DNA typing and microbial detection.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that serum pre-incubation with polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylene glycol (P glycol) and a proprietary reagent (Super ChemiBlock, Chemicon) significantly reduced non-specific background.
TL;DR: A single tube multiplex approach to simultaneously analyze the binding of antibodies to a large number of different antigens using the full multiplexing capacity theoretically offered by the Luminex suspension array technology is described.
TL;DR: The new SAT multiplex assay was rapid, reproducible, required less than 1 μl of plasma, and had a good correlation with ELISA, providing an important new tool for studying the immune response to malaria rapidly and efficiently in large populations, even when the amount of plasma available is limited.
Abstract: Antibodies to Plasmodium falciparum are classically measured using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Although highly sensitive, this technique is labor-intensive when large numbers of samples must be screened against multiple antigens. The suspension array technology (SAT) might be an alterative to ELISA, as it allows measurement of antibodies against multiple antigens simultaneously with a small volume of sample. This study sought to adapt the new SAT multiplex system for measuring antibodies against nine malarial vaccine candidate antigens, including recombinant proteins from two variants of merozoite surface protein 1, two variants of apical merozoite antigen 1, erythrocyte binding antigen 175, merozoite surface protein 3, and peptides from the circumsporozoite protein, ring erythrocyte surface antigen, and liver-stage antigen 1. Various concentrations of the antigens were coupled to microspheres with different spectral addresses, and plasma samples from Cameroonian adults were screened by SAT in mono- and multiplex formats and by ELISA. Optimal amounts of protein required to perform the SAT assay were 10- to 100-fold less than that needed for ELISA. Excellent agreement was found between the single and multiplex formats (R ≥ 0.96), even when two variants of the same antigen were used. The multiplex assay was rapid, reproducible, required less than 1 μl of plasma, and had a good correlation with ELISA. Thus, SAT provides an important new tool for studying the immune response to malaria rapidly and efficiently in large populations, even when the amount of plasma available is limited, e.g., in studies of neonates or finger-prick blood.