Determination of alpha-amylase activity: methods comparison and commutability study of several control materials

1995 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Gubern ◽  
F Canalias ◽  
F J Gella

Abstract Six different methods for alpha-amylase determination were compared by assaying human serum samples covering a wide range of alpha-amylase values. All the methods studied use as substrate a maltooligosaccharide with a chromophore group at the reducing end; some are chemically blocked at the nonreducing end. Intermethod comparison by regression and correspondence analyses showed significant differences for two methods. The commutability of 12 commercial control materials containing alpha-amylase was also assessed by the different methods in comparison with human serum specimens containing the pancreatic and salivary isoenzymes. We also studied the behavior of pancreatic and salivary materials prepared in our laboratory. Control materials with alpha-amylase of non-human origin were not commutable with the enzyme in human sera and should not be used for intermethod calibration.

1985 ◽  
Vol 31 (8) ◽  
pp. 1331-1334 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Gerber ◽  
K Naujoks ◽  
H Lenz ◽  
W Gerhardt ◽  
K Wulff

Abstract A monoclonal antibody (66C7) was prepared that specifically binds human salivary amylase (EC 3.2.1.1); it cross reacts with human pancreatic amylase by less than 1%. Two procedures are described for determination of isoamylases in human serum with this antibody: an enzyme immunoassay for determining amylase of salivary origin, and a routine method in which this amylase is immunoprecipitated and the remaining (pancreatic) amylase activity is assayed. Results by the two methods correlate well.


1979 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-217 ◽  
Author(s):  
L van Leeuwen

Abstract I describe a new kinetic enzymatic saccharogenic method for assaying alpha-amylase in human serum and urine. alpha-Amylase liberates maltose from starch. This is successively acted on by alpha-glucosidase, mutarotase, and glucose dehydrogenase. The resulting conversion of NAD+ to NADH, measured at 340 nm, during a 20-min incubation reflects amylase activity. Endogenous glucose is destroyed before measurement of amylase activity is begun.


1981 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 806-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
J P Bretaudiere ◽  
R Rej ◽  
P Drake ◽  
A Vassault ◽  
M Bailly

Abstract The suitability of control materials for determination of alpha-amylase activity was assessed in comparison with reference groups of authentic human serum specimens containing alpha-amylase of either pancreatic or salivary origin, specimens from patients with no pancreatic pathology, and normal specimens to which porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase was added. After determination of alpha-amylase activity by 11 commonly used techniques (five different principles), the results were processed by both classical (linear representation, regression) and multivariate (correspondence analysis, principal-components analysis) statistical techniques. Specimens containing porcine pancreatic alpha-amylase did not behave like any of the other groups. We conclude that porcine enzyme should not be used for interlaboratory quality-control surveys or intermethod comparison studies. Determination of human salivary and pancreatic alpha-amylase showed intermethod biases similar to those for authentic patients' specimens. Human salivary alpha-amylase, both because of its behavior and its commercial availability, is a satisfactory source for alpha-amylase activity of quality-control specimens. The nature of the matrix (polyvinylpyrrolidone, albumin, delipidated serum, bovine serum, or human serum) little influenced the behavior of the specimens for any of the methods studied.


Author(s):  
Hina Shamshad ◽  
Ali Sayqal ◽  
Jahan Zeb ◽  
Agha Zeeshan Mirza

Abstract A simple, accurate and precise RP-HPLC method was developed for the simultaneous determination of chloroquine, pyrimethamine and cetirizine hydrochloride concentrations in bulk drug and human serum. The assay was performed using a mobile phase of methanol: water (70:30) at pH of 2.8 ± 0.05 on the Purospher C-18 column with UV detection at 230 nm and rosuvastatin used as an internal standard. The retention times observed for chloroquine, pyrimethamine and cetirizine hydrochloride were 3.5, 2.5 and 5.5 minutes, respectively. The method was found to be specific for the assayed drugs showing a linear response in the concentration range of 1–100 μg mL−1 with coefficients of determination values of (r = 0.999). The method was developed and validated according to ICH guidelines. The method was used to monitor the serum samples and was found to be sensitive for therapeutic purposes, showing the potential to be a useful tool for routine analysis in laboratories.


2016 ◽  
Vol 129 ◽  
pp. 205-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian Marcelo Granero ◽  
Gastón Darío Pierini ◽  
Sebastián Noel Robledo ◽  
María Susana Di Nezio ◽  
Héctor Fernández ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. ACI.S7346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ani Mulyasuryani ◽  
Arie Srihardiastutie

A conductimetric enzyme biosensor for uric acid detection has been developed. The uricase, as enzyme, is isolated from Candida utilis and immobilized on a nata de coco membrane-Pt electrode. The biosensor demonstrates a linear response to urate over the concentration range 1-6 ppm and has good selectivity properties. The response is affected by the membrane thickness and pH change in the range 7.5-9.5. The response time is three minutes in aqueous solutions and in human serum samples. Application of the biosensor to the determination of uric acid in human serum gave results that compared favourably with those obtained by medical laboratory. The operational stability of the biosensor was not less than three days and the relative error is smaller than 10%.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Αιμιλία Ψαρούλη

Recent developments in the fields of bioanalytical chemistry and microelectronics have resulted in a growing trend of transferring the classical analytical methods from the laboratory bench to the field through the development of portable devices or microsystems based on biosensors. Biosensors are self-contained integrated devices capable to provide analytical information using biological recognition molecules in direct spatial contact with a transducer. Biosensors using antibodies or antigens as biological recognition elements are termed as immunosensors and they are based on the same principle as the classical solid-phase immunoassays.The aim of this thesis was to develop and evaluate an optical immunosensor based on Mach-Zehnder Interferometry and integrated on silicon substrate for the immunochemical determination of clinical analytes. The optical sensor developed is fabricated entirely by mainstream silicon technology by the Optical Biosensors group of the Institute of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology of NCSR “Demokritos” and combines arrays of ten sensors in a single silicon chip. Each sensor consists of an integrated on silicon light source that emits a broad spectrum in visible-near ultraviolet range and it is coupled to an integrated silicon nitride waveguide which has been patterned into Mach-Zehnder interferometer. The signal is recorded either through a photodetector monolithically integrated onto the same silicon chip (fully integrated configuration) or through an external spectrometer (semi-integrated configuration). In the fully integrated configuration, the signal recorded is the total photocurrent across the whole spectral range, while in semi-integrated configuration the whole transmission spectrum is continuously recorded and is mathematically transformed (Fourier Transform) to phase shift. As in the classical Mach-Zehnder interferometers, the waveguide in the proposed sensor is split into two arms, the sensing one which is appropriately modified with recognition biomolecule and the reference arm that is covered by a protective layer. The specific binding of the analyte with the immobilized onto the surface recognition biomolecule causes an effective refractive index change at the surface of the sensing arm thus affecting the phase of the waveguided light with respect to the reference arm. Thus, when the two arms converge again, an interference spectrum is generated that is altered during bioreaction providing the ability of monitoring in real-time and without using labels. The main difference of the sensor developed with respect to classical Mach-Zehnder interferometers is that the light source is monolithically integrated on the same silicon substrate with the waveguides and the waveguided light is not monochromatic, but broad spectrum.At first in this study, the method for chemical activation of biofunctionalization of chips was optimized. It was found that the highest signals were obtained when chips where activated by (3-aminopropyl)triethoxysilane and deposition of biomolecules solutions using a microarray spotter. Then, a comparison of the two sensor configurations, i.e. the fully and the semi-integrated configuration was performed using a model binding assay namely the streptavidin-biotin reaction. Semi-integrated configuration provided higher detection sensitivities mainly due to lower between-sensor signal variation in the same chip and between different chips. Thus, this configuration was selected for further evaluation with respect to the determination of analytes of clinical interest and especially of immunochemical determination of C-reactive protein in human serum samples. CRP is a marker of inflammation widely used in everyday clinical practice for diagnosis and therapy monitoring of inflammatory situations. Nevertheless, CRP has been also proposed as a prognostic marker of myocardial infraction and three risk levels have been established; low risk for serum CRP concentrations < 1 μg/mL; medium risk for concentrations in the range 1-3 μg/mL; and high risk for concentrations >3 μg/mL. In the frame of the present thesis, enzyme immunoassays for the determination of CRP in microtitration plates both competitive and non-competitive were developed in order to select the most appropriate reagents and define the immunoassay conditions. Then both assay format were transferred and evaluated on the sensor. It was found that the non-competitive format offered higher responses and ability for regeneration of immobilized onto the sensor antibody against CRP and was therefore selected for the final sensor evaluation. The assay developed following the competitive format was sensitive and accurate as was demonstrated through recovery and dilution linearity experiments, and provided for analysis of samples with a wide range of CRP concentrations since it was immune to the presence of serum. In addition, the CRP values determined with the immunosensor developed in serum samples from unknown donors were in good agreement with those determined for the same samples by commercially available kits and instruments showing the reliability of the determinations performed with the immunosensor developed and its potential for analysis of clinical samples.


2004 ◽  
Vol 516 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 135-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Luis Vı́lchez ◽  
Lilia Araujo ◽  
Avismelsi Prieto ◽  
Alberto Navalón

1978 ◽  
Vol 24 (9) ◽  
pp. 1620-1624 ◽  
Author(s):  
W H Porter ◽  
R E Roberts

Abstract We evaluated the Harleco alpha-glucosidase/hexokinase/glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase-coupled alpha-amylase method, bu use of the GEMSAEC centrifugal analyzer. Performance evaluation included kinetic studies of substrate and maltose hydrolysis as well as effects of endogenous glucose and fructose. The reagent was found to give a linear response with alpha-amylase activity to greater than 1200 U/liter. Within-run precision resulted in coefficients of variation (CV) of 0.9 to 3.2% over the range studied. Day-to-day precision corresponded to CV's of 2.4 to 4.4% over the same range of alpha-amylase procedure was found to be good (r = 0.997) for patients' sera examined.


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