Radial immunodiffusion

{{short description|Laboratory technique}}

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Radial immunodiffusion (RID), Mancini immunodiffusion or single radial immunodiffusion assay, is an older immunodiffusion technique used in immunology to determine the quantity or concentration of an antigen in a sample.Multiple sources:

  • {{cite book |doi=10.1016/B978-0-7234-3691-1.00106-9 |quote=radial immunodiffusion (RID) is an older method based on the classic precipitin reaction in which antigen and antibodies react and precipitate in liquid or semifluid media. |chapter=Assessment of proteins of the immune system |title=Clinical Immunology |date=2013 |last1=Abraham |first1=Roshini Sarah |last2=Barnidge |first2=David R. |last3=Lanza |first3=Ian R. |pages=1145–1159 |isbn=978-0-7234-3691-1}}
  • {{cite book |doi=10.1016/B978-0-323-95061-9.00026-6 |quote=Radial immunodiffusion (RID) is an older and less commonly used technique in most laboratories today. |chapter=Testing the innate immune system |title=Allergic and Immunologic Diseases |date=2022 |last1=Squire |first1=Jacqueline D. |last2=Leiding |first2=Jennifer W. |pages=725–735 |isbn=978-0-323-95061-9 }}

== Description ==

= Preparation =

A solution containing antibody is added to a heated medium such as agar or agarose dissolved in buffered normal saline. The molten medium is then poured onto a microscope slide or into an open container, such as a Petri dish, and allowed to cool and form a gel. A solution containing the antigen is then placed in a well that is punched into the gel. The slide or container is then covered, closed or placed in a humidity box to prevent evaporation.[https://www.academia.edu/31352142/Differing_Methodology_and_Equations_Used_in_Quantitating_Immunoglobulins_by_Radial_Immunodiffusion_A_Comparative_Evaluation_of_Reported_and_Commercial_Techniques Berne (1974)]{{cite book |last1=Davis|first1=Neil C.|first2=Monto|last2=Ho|year=1976|chapter=Chapter 2: Quantitation of Immunoglobulins: Radial Immunodiffusion|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/manualofclinical00rose/page/4/|editor1-last=Rose|editor1-first=Noel|editor2-last=Friedman|editor2-first=Herman|title=Manual of Clinical Immunology|url=https://archive.org/details/manualofclinical00rose/page/n6/mode/1up|pages=5–8|location=Washington, D.C.|publisher=American Society for Microbiology|url-access=registration|isbn=0-914826-09-3|oclc=1036571523|lccn=76017595|access-date=2019-06-14|via=Internet Archive}}[https://archive.org/details/essentialsofimmu0000stan/page/172/mode/2up Stanley (2002)][http://www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/microbiology/DMIP/dmex03.htm LSUMC/MIP Dental Microbiology Lab (2002).]

The antigen diffuses radially into the medium, forming a circle of precipitin that marks the boundary between the antibody and the antigen. The diameter of the circle increases with time as the antigen diffuses into the medium, reacts with the antibody, and forms insoluble precipitin complexes.Multiple sources:

  • {{cite journal |last1=Mancini |first1=G. |last2=Carbonara |first2=A.O. |last3=Heremans |first3=J.F. |title=Immunochemical quantitation of antigens by single radial immunodiffusion |journal=Immunochemistry |date=September 1965 |volume=2 |issue=3 |pages=235–IN6 |doi=10.1016/0019-2791(65)90004-2 |pmid=4956917 }}
  • {{cite book | vauthors = Mancini G, Vaerman JP, Carbonara AO, Heremans JF | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3dYvAQAAIAAJ&q=%22single-radial-diffusion+method%22|chapter=A single–radial–diffusion method for the immunological quantitation of proteins |editor=Peeters, Hubert|title=Protides of the Biological Fluids: Proceedings of the 11th Colloquium, Bruges, Belgium (1963) |date=December 1964|pages=370–373|place=Amsterdam, The Netherlands|publisher=Elsevier|oclc=25285708|via=Google Books|accessdate=2020-07-08}} The antigen is quantitated by measuring the diameter of the precipitin circle and comparing it with the diameters of precipitin circles formed by known quantities or concentrations of the antigen.{{cite book |doi=10.1007/978-1-4615-7225-1_5 |chapter=Review of Immunologic Techniques: Radial Immunodiffusion (RID) |title=Immunoassays in Coagulation Testing |date=1984 |pages=21–22 |isbn=978-1-4615-7227-5 | vauthors = Parvez Z }}

Antigen-antibody complexes are small and soluble when in antigen excess. Therefore, precipitation near the center of the circle is usually less dense than it is near the circle's outer edge, where antigen is less concentrated.

Expansion of the circle reaches an endpoint and stops when free antigen is depleted and when antigen and antibody reach equivalence. However, the clarity and density of the circle's outer edge may continue to increase after the circle stops expanding.

= Interpretation =

File:Absolute myocardial blood flow.png contains the initial antigen concentrations, the vertical ordinate (Y-axis) contains the squares of the precipitin ring diameters, and each plot is a measurement time. The entirely curved purple plot (bottom) appears when all rings are expanding. The entirely straight red plot (top) appears when all rings have reached their endpoints and have stopped expanding. Intermediate plots are partially straight and partially curved (see

[https://www.academia.edu/31352142/Differing_Methodology_and_Equations_Used_in_Quantitating_Immunoglobulins_by_Radial_Immunodiffusion_A_Comparative_Evaluation_of_Reported_and_Commercial_Techniques Berne (1974)] p. 65: "In Figure 4, the squares of diameters are plotted as a linear ordinate and the concentrations as a linear abscissa ..... here, linearity appears in progressively larger portions of the curve, corresponding to cessation of growth. The plot is linear over the entire range at equivalence." and [https://archive.org/details/essentialsofimmu0000stan/page/174/mode/1up Stanley (2002), p. 174, Fig. 12-6.]).]]

For most antigens, the area and the square of the diameter of the circle at the circle's endpoint are directly proportional to the initial quantity of antigen and are inversely proportional to the concentration of antibody. Therefore, a graph that compares the quantities or concentrations of antigen in the original samples with the areas or the squares of the diameters of the precipitin circles on a best-fit line plot will usually be a straight line after all circles have reached their endpoints (equivalence method).

Circles that small quantities of antigen create reach their endpoints before circles that large quantities create do so. Therefore, if areas or diameters of circles are measured while some, but not all, circles have stopped expanding, such a graph will be straight in the portion whose wells initially contained the smaller quantities or concentrations of antigen and will be curved in the portion whose wells contained the larger quantities or concentrations.

While circles are still expanding, a graph that compares the initial quantities or concentrations of the antigen on a logarithmic scale with the diameters or areas of the circles on a linear scale may be a straight line (kinetic method).{{cite journal |last1=Fahey |first1=John L. |last2=McKelvey |first2=Eugene M. |title=Quantitative Determination of Serum Immunoglobulins in Antibody-Agar Plates |journal=The Journal of Immunology |date=January 1965 |volume=94 |issue=1 |pages=84–90 |doi=10.4049/jimmunol.94.1.84 |pmid=14253527 }} However, circles of the precipitate are smaller and less distinct during expansion than they are after expansion has ended. Further, temperature affects the rate of expansion, but does not affect the size of a circle at its endpoint. In addition, the range of circle diameters for the same initial quantities or concentrations of antigen is smaller while some circles are enlarging than they are after all circles have reached their endpoints.

The quantity and concentration of insoluble antigen-antibody complexes at the outer edge of the circle increase with time. The clarity and density of the circle's outer edge therefore also increase with time. As a result, measurements of the sizes of circles and graphs produced from these measurements are often more accurate after circles have stopped expanding than they are when circles are still enlarging. For those reasons, it is often more desirable to take measurements after all circles have reached their endpoints than it is to take measurements while some or all circles are still enlarging.

Measurements of large circles are more accurate than are those of small circles.{{cite journal |last1=Kalff |first1=M.W. |title=Quantitative determination of serum immunoglobulin levels by single radial immunodiffusion |journal=Clinical Biochemistry |date=March 1970 |volume=3 |pages=91–104 |doi=10.1016/S0009-9120(70)80011-X |pmid=4110625 |quote=4. The coefficient of variation of the immunoglobulin determinations in one batch of test serum repeatedly quantified in the course of ten months, was taken as the measure for the reproducibility of the method. This coefficient was 8.5% for IgG, 5.8% for IgA, and 4.4% for IgM. The immunoglobulin levels in this test serum lay in the middle range of the calibration lines. The accuracy of the method increases with the height of the calibration line. }} It is therefore often desirable to adjust the concentration of antibody and the initial quantities of antigen to assure that precipitin rings will be large.

Radial immunodiffusion techniques

File:Cavity numbers increase exponentially with sugar consumption.jpg

One can determine the antigen concentration in a sample whose concentration is unknown by finding its location on a graph that charts the diameters of precipitin circles produced by three or more reference samples with known antigen concentrations. Two techniques often produce straight lines on such graphs. The techniques produce those lines on different types of graphs.

The techniques and their graphs are:

  • Measuring circles while all are expanding (kinetic method): graph charting logarithms of initial antigen concentrations vs. diameters of precipitin circles on a best-fit semi-logarithmic plot.
  • Measuring circles after all reach their end points (equivalence method): graph charting initial antigen concentrations vs. squares of diameters of precipitin circles on a best-fit line plot.

Notes

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References

  • {{cite journal |last1=Berne |first1=Bernard H |title=Differing Methodology and Equations Used in Quantitating Immunoglobulins by Radial Immunodiffusion—A Comparative Evaluation of Reported and Commercial Techniques |journal=Clinical Chemistry |date=January 1974 |volume=20 |issue=1 |pages=61–69 |url=https://www.academia.edu/31352142/Differing_Methodology_and_Equations_Used_in_Quantitating_Immunoglobulins_by_Radial_Immunodiffusion_A_Comparative_Evaluation_of_Reported_and_Commercial_Techniques|doi=10.1093/clinchem/20.1.61|access-date=2025-03-10|via=Academia.edu}}
  • {{cite web|author=LSUMC/MIP Dental Microbiology Lab|url=http://www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/microbiology/DMIP/dmex03.htm|date=2002|title=II. Lab Work: B. Radial Immunodiffusion|work=Exercise 3: Antigen-Antibody I|publisher=Louisiana State University School of Medicine: Department of Microbiology, Immunology & Parasitology|location=New Orleans, Louisiana|access-date=2015-11-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040804170209/http://www.medschool.lsuhsc.edu/microbiology/DMIP/dmex03.htm|archive-date=2004-08-04|url-status=live}}
  • {{cite book|last=Stanley|first=Jacqueline|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/essentialsofimmu0000stan/page/172/mode/2up|chapter=Chapter 12: Precipitation: Single Radial Immunodiffusion: Laboratory Technique 12-1: Radial Immunodiffusion Test|pages=172–174|url=https://archive.org/details/essentialsofimmu0000stan/page/n4/mode/1up|title=Essentials of Immunology & Serology|url-access=registration|isbn=978-0-7668-1064-8|lccn=2002280630|oclc=1149023866|publisher=Delmar Division of Thomson Learning|date=2002|location=Albany, New York|accessdate=2017-05-15|via=Internet Archive}}

Further reading

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  • {{cite journal |last1=Mancini |first1=Giuliana |url=https://garfield.library.upenn.edu/classics1992/A1992HX83800002.pdf |title=This Week's Citation Classic: Refining the Angelotron |journal=Current Contents |volume=35 |number=26 |page=9 |date=29 June 1992 }}
  • {{cite journal|first=Stephan E.|last=Ritzmann| name-list-style = vanc |url=https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/backfile/Content_public/Journal/labmed/9/7/10.1093_labmed_9.7.23/2/labmed9-0023.pdf |title=Radial Immunodiffusion Revisited. Part 1|journal=Laboratory Medicine|volume=9|number=7|pages=23–33|date=July 1978|publisher=American Society for Clinical Pathology and Oxford University Press|oclc=614490269|issn=1943-7730|doi=10.1093/labmed/9.7.23|accessdate=2017-10-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171029134510/https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/backfile/Content_public/Journal/labmed/9/7/10.1093_labmed_9.7.23/2/labmed9-0023.pdf?Expires=1509377778&Signature=EMUOpdErtOe36VVU0OEoK60ibrA925dAlideNaJVKOfp2w-6yu1YZ3v1YJ2hMW8gotDFFiZN0y7FTy2NqWoAsm3Eu0fewSWLzzyUT2gg6UqZZzr6xo6~Unx4W62KZmVDDVOc38xQPBmPp8z6P2R5FmR2Xo8cBRsHv8CxPWoqiP7sRuCDrHRjqeJvnme52xPuPX3~PJJmD0ifLzkfdD8w-0GorJs7Dg9hEiOhQGX47Pw7dcOpjcqd878O-WmDcDgR-Pu6jWcwqLD5ClKZ7W6ZydSDGwSOGDCscDWqS228JaOr~p7Us3ow~O04WmDF4otYODtpRDzm4PP81OnXNwIP3A__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIUCZBIA4LVPAVW3Q|archive-date=2017-10-29|url-status=dead}}
  • {{Cite journal|first=Stephan E.|last=Ritzmann|name-list-style=vanc |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807194750/https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/backfile/Content_public/Journal/labmed/9/8/10.1093_labmed_9.8.27/2/labmed9-0027.pdf?Expires=1502228805&Signature=HWtBkA1BCt5g9KJOOLiTVnWTOfiW-6hLNjIbzYeYs3qilahsgkeKl7g9eWsWlb5MJyAU60uQKj2B7dhyXP5ND8gFNRzpwIRS-9zcPcHG0HOqhZHPQ-CIgNAB96OaUjoIc7OaiLxT3~Vuw-eMvrD4s-Gp1RUMWBjGLo2PpZVMdsqgWOC6fL~fdgm5mwonoIiIOs~aIEMxizxMhkjQJRYMB~fQTxOlL8bLqGkYFDdeq8xp4lEC-k1ACu~7XXuJ9edKLd03w891B6Nd-yUNWbTfoKF3tcjaAsBdoE7KrXZBkIl4UfbPza1dtRtIJ7DH69DWxFo9w3j0ZyC1fDyOjyBvLw__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIUCZBIA4LVPAVW3Q|archivedate=2017-08-07|url-status=dead|url=https://oup.silverchair-cdn.com/oup/backfile/Content_public/Journal/labmed/9/8/10.1093_labmed_9.8.27/2/labmed9-0027.pdf?Expires=1502228805&Signature=HWtBkA1BCt5g9KJOOLiTVnWTOfiW-6hLNjIbzYeYs3qilahsgkeKl7g9eWsWlb5MJyAU60uQKj2B7dhyXP5ND8gFNRzpwIRS-9zcPcHG0HOqhZHPQ-CIgNAB96OaUjoIc7OaiLxT3~Vuw-eMvrD4s-Gp1RUMWBjGLo2PpZVMdsqgWOC6fL~fdgm5mwonoIiIOs~aIEMxizxMhkjQJRYMB~fQTxOlL8bLqGkYFDdeq8xp4lEC-k1ACu~7XXuJ9edKLd03w891B6Nd-yUNWbTfoKF3tcjaAsBdoE7KrXZBkIl4UfbPza1dtRtIJ7DH69DWxFo9w3j0ZyC1fDyOjyBvLw__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAIUCZBIA4LVPAVW3Q|title=Radial Immunodiffusion Revisited. Part 2. Application and Interpretation of RID Assays|journal=Laboratory Medicine|publisher=American Society for Clinical Pathology and Oxford University Press|volume=9|number=8|date=August 1978|pages=27–40|oclc=614490269|issn=1943-7730|doi=10.1093/labmed/9.8.27|accessdate=2017-08-07}}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Taylor |first1=R N |last2=Fulford |first2=K M |last3=Huong |first3=A Y |title=Comparison of kinetic and end-point diffusion methods for quantitating human serum immunoglobulins |journal=Journal of Clinical Microbiology |date=July 1978 |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=23–27 |doi=10.1128/jcm.8.1.23-27.1978 |pmc=275108 }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Jalanti |first1=Rosemarie |last2=Henney |first2=Christopher S. |title=Studies on single radial immunodiffusion techniques for the quantitation of antigen and antibody |journal=Journal of Immunological Methods |date=January 1972 |volume=1 |issue=2 |pages=123–131 |doi=10.1016/0022-1759(72)90039-7 }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Masseyeff |first1=RenéF. |last2=Zisswiller |first2=Marie-Claude |title=A versatile method of radial immunodiffusion assay employing microquantities of antiserum |journal=Analytical Biochemistry |date=August 1969 |volume=30 |issue=2 |pages=180–189 |doi=10.1016/0003-2697(69)90388-1 }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Vaerman |first1=J.-P. |last2=Lebacq-Verhayden |first2=A.-M. |last3=Scolari |first3=L. |last4=Heremans |first4=J.F. |title=Further studies on singel radial immunodiffusion—II The reversed system: Diffusion of antibodies in antigen-containing gels |journal=Immunochemistry |date=March 1969 |volume=6 |issue=2 |pages=287–293 |doi=10.1016/0019-2791(69)90165-7 }}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Prakash |first1=V. J. |last2=Norrby |first2=E. |last3=Payne |first3=L. |title=Single Radial Immunodiffusion Test for Detecting Antibodies Against Surface Antigens of Intracellular and Extracellular Vaccinia Virus |journal=Journal of General Virology |date=June 1977 |volume=35 |issue=3 |pages=463–472 |doi=10.1099/0022-1317-35-3-463 }}

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