An anti-human immunoglobulin M monoclonal antibody for detection of antibodies toToxoplasma gondii

Abstract
An anti-human μ-chain monoclonal antibody, Tibi 82, was produced and tested for specificity by radioimmunoassay. Its reliability in detecting IgM antibodies toToxoplasma gondii was tested by two reverse immunosorbent methods (IgM-ISAGA and IgM-SPIHA) and the IgM fluorescent antibody test (IgM-IFA) on 400 sera. Whereas the results obtained with Tibi 82 and with two polyclonal reagents were highly correlated, the third commercial polyclonal reagent provided many false negative results. By standardizing IgM binding, Tibi 82 allowed the comparison of IgM-ISAGA with IgM-SPIHA on 100 sera: 17 % of the sera tested showed discrepancies due to the different toxoplasma antigens used. Although Tibi 82 facilitated the reading of results and enhanced sensitivity and specificity of the double-sandwich IgM-IFA method, the latter was still less sensitive than IgM-ISAGA with Tibi 82. Tests with the monoclonal antibody were consistently superior to tests with polyclonal antibodies.