We have calibrated a secondary serum protein standard by use (as primary standards) of samples of albumin and polylysine glycated with [14C]glucose in vitro, the glycation of which was assessed by radioactivity measurements and by elementary analysis for C and N. Using this standard for calibration in our improved fructosamine assay, one obtains an average fructosamine value of 247 μmol/L for nondiabetic individuals (or, in terms of total serum protein, 3.2 μmol/ g) - about a tenth the value we obtained when we used the fructosamine assay of Johnson et al. (Clin Chim Acta 1983;127:87-95), standardized with desoxymorpholinofructose. In contrast, results corresponded well with the value for mean glycation of serum proteins, 3 μmol/g, determined by a furosine/HPLC method. Evidently the proposed procedure, in which a standard sharing the binding characteristics of endogenous glycated proteins is used together with our modified new fructosamine assay, leads to more realistic values for the concentrations of glycated serum proteins.
CITATION STYLE
Schleicher, E. D., & Vogt, B. W. (1990). Standardization of serum fructosamine assays. Clinical Chemistry, 36(1), 136–139. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/36.1.136
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