Sample Processing and Requirements 1.Serum: Place the whole blood specimen collected in a serum separator tube at room temperature for 2 hours or at 4°C overnight. Then, centrifuge at 1000×g for 20 minutes. Remove the supernatant and store it at -20°C or -80°C. However, repeated freezing and thawing should be avoided. 2.Plasma: Collect the specimen using EDTA or heparin as an anticoagulant. Within 30 minutes of collection, centrifuge at 1000×g for 15 minutes at 2-8°C. Remove the supernatant and test it. Alternatively, store it at -20°C or -80°C. However, repeated freezing and thawing should be avoided. 3. Tissue Homogenization: Rinse the tissue with pre-chilled PBS (0.01M, pH 7.4) to remove any residual blood (lysed red blood cells in the homogenate will affect the measurement results). Weigh the tissue and mince it. Add the minced tissue to the appropriate volume of PBS (generally a 1:9 weight-to-volume ratio, e.g., 1g of tissue sample to 9mL of PBS. The specific volume can be adjusted according to experimental needs and recorded. It is recommended to add protease inhibitors to the PBS) in a glass homogenizer and grind thoroughly on ice. To further lyse tissue cells, the homogenate can be sonicated or repeatedly freeze-thawed. Finally, centrifuge the homogenate at 5000×g for 5-10 minutes. Remove the supernatant for analysis. 4.Cell culture supernatant or other biological specimens: Centrifuge at 1000×g for 20 minutes. Remove the supernatant for testing, or store at -20°C or -80°C, but avoid repeated freezing and thawing. Note: Hemolysis of the specimen will affect the final test results, so hemolyzed specimens are not suitable for this test. Reagent Preparation After removing the kit from the refrigerator, allow it to equilibrate to room temperature before use. Dilution of 20× Wash Buffer: Dilute the sample 1:20 with distilled water, i.e., add 1 part 20× Wash Buffer to 19 parts distilled water. Procedure 1. After equilibration at room temperature for 20 minutes, remove the desired strips from the aluminum foil bag. Seal the remaining strips in a ziplock bag and return them to 4°C. 2. Set up negative control wells, positive control wells, and sample wells. Add 50 μL of the control substance to each negative and positive control well. 3. Add 50 μL of the sample to be tested to the sample wells; do not add any to the blank wells. 4. Add 100 μL of horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-labeled detection antibody to each control well and sample well, except for the blank well. Seal the wells with plate sealing film and incubate at 37°C in a water bath or incubator for 60 minutes. 5. Discard the liquid, pat dry on absorbent paper, and fill each well with wash solution (350 μL). Let stand for 1 minute, then shake off the wash solution and pat dry on absorbent paper. Repeat this process five times (a plate washer can also be used). 6. Add 50 μL each of substrates A and B to each well and incubate at 37°C in the dark for 15 minutes. 7. Add 50 μL of stop solution to each well. Within 15 minutes, measure the OD value of each well at a wavelength of 450 nm. Calculation of Experimental Results 1. Negative control OD value: less than 0.2. 2. Positive control OD value: greater than 0.8. 3. Positive judgment (Cut-Off value): If the negative control OD value is +0.25 and the sample OD value is greater than the threshold, it is judged as positive, otherwise it is negative.
|