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Merck

Direct sandwich ELISA to detect the adulteration of human breast milk by cow milk.

Journal of dairy science (2023-07-22)
Mahmoud K Eldahshoury, Ian P Hurley
RESUMEN

The demand for commercially available human breast milk has significantly increased in recent years. For various reasons, a significant amount of commercially available human breast milk is being adulterated with other types of milk. This fraudulent practice poses a threat to consumers' health due to potential adulterants such as cow milk, which may put the infant at risk due to intolerance or allergy. A direct sandwich anti-bovine IgG ELISA has been developed for the sensitive and specific detection of cow milk in adulterated human breast milk. This assay uses polyclonal anti-bovine IgG antibody as a capture antibody and monoclonal anti-bovine IgG-alkaline phosphatase antibody as a detection antibody. Once optimized, the assay was found to be highly sensitive, and specific to bovine IgG. The assay had no significant cross-reaction with human breast milk, indicating that it was highly specific. The anti-bovine IgG ELISA was able to detect the presence of cow milk in adulterated human breast milk with a detection limit of 0.001% cow milk. The developed assay was highly reproducible (coefficient of variation <10%). The developed direct sandwich anti-bovine IgG ELISA is simple, reliable, and reproducible, making it an ideal test for this purpose.

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Sigma-Aldrich
IgG from goat serum, reagent grade, ≥95% (SDS-PAGE), essentially salt-free, lyophilized powder
Sigma-Aldrich
Monoclonal Anti-Bovine IgG−Alkaline Phosphatase antibody produced in mouse, clone BG-18, purified immunoglobulin, buffered aqueous glycerol solution