Abstract
An immunochemical procedure is described for quantitation of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (mAspAT; EC 2.6.1.1) activity in human serum specimens. Antibodies directed against purified soluble aspartate aminotransferase (s-AspAT) from human erythrocytes were produced in rabbits and partly purified. Antibody sufficient for analyses of >6000 specimens could be obtained from 15 mL of rabbit antiserum; contaminant AspAT activity of the antibody preparation was < 0.4 U/L. Addition of antibody directly to purified AspAT isoenzyme resulted in inhibition of s-AspAT but had no measurable effect upon m-AspAT. Antibody is incubated with serum in the presence of polyethylene glycol for 60 min at room temperature, then 60 min at 4°C, and centrifuged (7000 x g, 4°C, 15 min). No detectable s-AspAT activity remains in the supernatant fluid; thus m-AspAT activity can be measured directly. Precision, both within-day and day-to-day, was < 1 U/L, or 3.0% of residual m-AspAT activity. The method completely removed 1200 U of purified s-AspAT activity per liter; addition of s-AspAT to serum in increasing concentrations to about 500 U/L had no effect upon the measurement of residual m-AspAT activity. Results of the procedure described showed excellent correlation with those by an alternative procedure involving antibodies directed against m-AspAT. Addition of both anti-s- and anti-m-AspAT antibodies resulted in complete removal of serum AspAT activity. Univalent Fab fragments prepared from anti-s-AspAT activity without precipitation. Although a homogeneous immunoinhibition assay was possible, the greater precision of the precipitation assay made it preferable.
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CITATION STYLE
Rej, R. (1980). An immunochemical procedure for determination of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase in human serum. Clinical Chemistry, 26(12), 1694–1700. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/26.12.1694
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