Corticosteroid-Binding Globulin Human ELISA

Regulatery Status: RUO
Type: Sandwich ELISA, Biotin-labelled antibody
Other Names Status: Transcortin, CBG, Serpin A6
Species: Human
Catalog No Size
Product Catalog No: RD192234200R Pack Size: 96 wells (1 kit)

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Product Features

Human corticosteroid binding globulin (CBG, transcortin), also referred to as SerpinA6, belongs to the serpin superfamily. Corticosteroid binding globulin is a 52 kDa secreted α1-glycoprotein consisting of 405 amino acids. Corticosteroid binding globulin is synthesized and secreted by hepatocytes in the liver and is present in glycocorticoid responsive cells. The concentration of corticosteroid binding globulin is regulated by estrogens. CBG is the major transport protein for progestins and glucocorticoids within the blood. Thus CBG regulates their bioavailability and metabolic clearance and protects them from absorption into cells and degradation by chemicals and enzymes. CBG contains a single steroid binding site with high affinity for cortisol and progesterone. About 80–90% of circulating cortisol is bound to CBG. Albumin bound cortisol is reported to represent 14% and free cortisol 6% of total plasma cortisol under basal conditions. The CBG bound cortisol is considered to be biologically inactive, whereas the unbound cortisol constitutes the active form of cortisol. The active fraction of plasma cortisol will thus depend on the concentration of CBG. Defects in the gene encoding CBG are the cause of corticosteroid binding globulin deficiency (CBG deficiency), a rare disorder characterized by reduced CBG production that results in hypo/ hypertension and muscle fatigue. The plasma concentration of CBG shows little or no diurnal variation and no marked differences are observed in adult subjects according to age, sex or menstrual cycle. In umbilical cord blood, however, CBG is present at half of the normal adult level and prepubertal children have higher levels than adults. Plasma CBG levels increase during pregnancy and are decreased in cirrhosis. Estrogen therapy (e.g. oral hormonal contraception) or implantation during pregnancy cause a very marked increase of the CBG concentration. Decreased levels of CBG are observed in women with polycystic ovary syndrome, hypoproteinemia, Cushing´s syndrome or corticoid treatment and some cases of vitamin B12 deficiency. Extremely low levels of CBG have been reported in patients with septic shock. Measurement of corticosteroid binding globulin is important to the interpretation of cortisol levels. The concentration of unbound cortisol, which is biologically active, can be calculated from the concentration of total cortisol and that of CBG on the basis of mass action.

Features

  • European Union: for in vitro diagnostic use
  • Rest of the world: for research use only!
  • The total assay time is less than 3 hours
  • The kit measures total corticosteroid binding globulin in serum and plasma (EDTA, citrate, heparin)
  • Assay format is 96 wells
  • Quality Controls are human serum based. No animal sera are used
  • Standard is purified native protein based
  • Components of the kit are provided ready to use, concentrated or lyophilized

Research topic

Immune Response, Infection and Inflammation, Steroid hormones

Techical Sheet / Info

Type

Sandwich ELISA, Biotin-labelled antibody

Applications

Serum, Plasma-EDTA, Plasma-Heparin, Plasma-Citrate

Sample Requirements

5 µl/well

Storage/Expiration

Store the complete kit at 2–8°C. Under these conditions, the kit is stable until the expiration date (see label on the box).

Calibration Curve

Calibration Range

3.13–200 ng/ml

Limit of Detection

0.01 ng/ml

Intra-assay (Within-Run)

n = 8; CV = 1.7%

Inter-assay (Run-to-Run)

n = 5; CV = 7.1%

Spiking Recovery

100,30%

Dilutation Linearity

98,50%

Crossreactivity

bovine  Non-detectable
cat  Non-detectable
dog  Not tested
goat  Non-detectable
hamster  Non-detectable
horse  Non-detectable
monkey  Non-detectable
mouse  Non-detectable
pig  Non-detectable
rat  Non-detectable
sheep  Non-detectable
chicken  Not tested
human  Yes
rabbit  Non-detectable
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    References

    – Hawley JM, Owen LJ, Lockhart SJ, Monaghan PJ, Armston A, Chadwick CA, Wilshaw H, Freire M, Perry L, Keevil BG. Serum Cortisol: An Up-To-Date Assessment of Routine Assay Performance. Clin Chem. 2016 Jul 20;

    – Sharma A, Aoun P, Wigham J, Weist S, Veldhuis JD. Gender determines ACTH recovery from hypercortisolemia in healthy older humans. Metabolism. 2013 Sep 25;

    – Wu J, Xie X, Liu Y, He J, Benitez R, Buckanovich RJ, Lubman DM. Identification and confirmation of differentially expressed fucosylated glycoproteins in the serum of ovarian cancer patients using a lectin array and LC-MS/MS. J Proteome Res. 2012 Sep 7;11 (9):4541-52

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