Kinetic investigations on adenosine deaminase from calf intestinal mucosa by spectrophotometric monitoring of the reaction at 264, 270, or 228 nm show that this method does not produce artifactual inhibition by substrate excess up to 0.7 mM concentration, when either adenosine or 2'-deoxyadenosine a
A critical reappraisal of Waddell's technique for ultraviolet spectrophotometric protein estimation
β Scribed by Peter Wolf
- Book ID
- 102986875
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1983
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 816 KB
- Volume
- 129
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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β¦ Synopsis
Waddell's method of estimating protein concentration by the difference between spectrophotometric absorptions (2 15-225 nm) has been reexamined. Over limited ranges of total protein, a linear relation was found for ten purified proteins; the narrowest range was between 5 and 25 &ml. Using published extinction coefficients at 280 nm for these ten proteins, protein concentration at 280 nm correlated closely with the 2 15 nm/225 nm difference measurements (mean difference of 2.6%). Waddell's method also accurately determined the total protein in a mixture of proteins with widely varying individual 280-nm extinction coefficients. Biuret estimates of total protein in plasma or serum gave poor correlation with measurements by Waddell's method. Within protein concentration limits, Waddell's method was linear, narrow, and more variable, both for individual proteins and for protein mixtures, than previously reported. Within these limits, the method is probably as accurate a measure of total protein as measurement by nitrogen analysis, with the advantage of being nondestructive.
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