A picomolar spectrophotometric assay for superoxide dismutase
β Scribed by Thomas W. Kirby; Irwin Fridovich
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 543 KB
- Volume
- 127
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
During the aerobic xanthine oxidase reaction, 0; is produced and accumulates to a steady state determined by a balance between the rate of production of this radical and its rate of dismutation. Addition of ferricytochrome c then results in a biphasic reduction, the very rapid phase of which reflects reaction of the accumulated O;, while the slower phase corresponds to the continuing production of this radical. Superoxide dismutase suppresses the accumulation of 0; during the xanthine oxidase reaction and thus diminishes the burst of reduction seen upon addition of ferricytochrome c. This effect has been utilized, at pH 10.2, as the basis of an assay that permits measurement of picomolar levels of superoxide dismutase. The theory and practice of this ultrasensitive assay are described.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Superoxide dismutase activity was assayed in terms of its ability to inhibit the radical-mediated chain-propagating autoxidation of epinephrine. The enzyme assay based on adrenochrome absorption at 480 nm has been improved by measuring the absorption change at 320 nm. This alternative procedure was
A procedure is described for the intact-cell assay of superoxide dismutase(s). The technique involves the use of toluene which renders the cells permeable to the necessary components of a photochemical assay for supcroxide dismutase. Whole-cell superoxide dismutase activities from a number of procar
The antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1) (SOD) catalyzes the conversion of superoxide anion radical (O2.-) to hydrogen peroxide and molecular oxygen. SOD helps prevent tissue damage by O2.- and its metabolites, and augmentation of tissue SOD is a useful therapeutic strategy in certa
Endogenous interfering substances can be detected by applying the techniques of parallelline analysis of variance to the assay of superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities in crude tissue extracts. The technique also allows expression of specific activities in terms of units of activity as defined by co