Separation of Wheat Alpha-Amylase Isoenzymes by Chromatofocusing

Author(s):  
B. A. Marchylo ◽  
J. E. Kruger
1989 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-648 ◽  
Author(s):  
J L Badenoch ◽  
R Bals

Abstract We evaluated two kinetic methods for determining total amylase activity and isoenzyme composition in serum. Stability studies of reagents for measuring total activity indicate that reagents containing 4-nitrophenyl-alpha-glucosides or enzyme-linked reagents can be stored only for seven days at 4 degrees C. Methods based on 4-nitrophenyl-alpha-glucoside substrates cannot be used if the reagent absorbance at 405 nm exceeds 2. However, in the alpha-amylase EPS method (Boehringer Mannheim) an ethylidene-protected 4-nitrophenyl-alpha-D-maltoheptaoside substrate is stable for up to 28 days after reconstitution. Further studies indicated that the Amylase-DS (Beckman) and the alpha-Amylase EPS standard curves are linear to at least six times the upper limit of the reference interval. Within-batch imprecision (CV less than 1.1%) and between-batch imprecision (CV less than 3.3%) for these two methods are comparable with those for other kinetic methods, and there is excellent correlation (r2 = 0.983) between the two methods. The reference interval, determined by use of samples from 90 healthy blood donors, is 31 to 141 U/L for the amylase-DS method, 22 to 92 U/L for the alpha-Amylase EPS method. We also used these two methods to measure amylase isoenzymes after inhibiting the salivary isoenzyme with either a lectin or a monoclonal antibody. We found the monoclonal antibody method more specific than the lectin inhibition method for determining the isoenzymes.


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.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 387-390 ◽  
Author(s):  
V L Royse ◽  
D M Jensen

Abstract Evaluation of alpha-amylase isoenzymes as a clinical diagnostic aid by previous methodologies has been either too insensitive or too cumbersome for routine clinical laboratory use. With use of an agarose gel electrophoresis system (Worthington Diagnostic Systems, Inc.) serum amylase activity can easily be resolved into at least nine isoenzymes, the resolution being comparable with that of isoelectric focusing. Samples can be analyzed in less than one working day, with use of conventional reagents.


1991 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 360S-360S
Author(s):  
M. ANNE LIVESLEY ◽  
CLIFFORD M. BRAY

1995 ◽  
Vol 41 (4) ◽  
pp. 519-522 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Uchida ◽  
S Tokutake ◽  
Y Motoyama ◽  
K Hosoi ◽  
N Yamaji

Abstract We developed an automated method for measurement of alpha-amylase isoenzymes in serum by a single kinetic assay (SKA) and a double kinetic assay (DKA) with 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl-6(5)-azido-6(5)-deoxy-beta-maltopentaoside as a substrate and 6(3)-deoxymaltotriose (DOG3) as a novel selective amylase inhibitor. DOG3 showed a large difference in inhibitory activity between human pancreatic alpha-amylase (HPA; 86.9% inhibition) and salivary alpha-amylase (32.1% inhibition) at 0.33 mmol/L. Constant inhibition was obtained immediately after addition of DOG3. The inhibitory effect did not change with variation in concentrations of amylase up to approximately 3000 U/L. The results obtained by SKA correlated well with those obtained by three methods: monoclonal antibody (r = 0.988), wheat germ inhibitor (r = 0.989), and DKA (r = 0.995). The within-run and between-run CVs for HPA were 0.63-2.32% on SKA, 0.69-1.81% on DKA. No significant interferences by endogenous serum compounds were observed with the proposed methods.


1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (7) ◽  
pp. 1227-1228 ◽  
Author(s):  
N W Tietz ◽  
D F Shuey

Abstract On evaluation, an S-type alpha-amylase inhibitor from Sigma shows essentially the same performance characteristics as the inhibitor from wheat germ prepared according to O'Donnell and McGeeney (Biochim Biophys Acta 422:159, 1976). This inhibitor is now commercially available; thus any clinical laboratory can perform isoamylase determinations with a simple, fast procedure that is also suitable for emergency situations.


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