An amperometric enzyme electrode for bile acids
β Scribed by W.John Albery; R.Bruce Lennox; Edmond Magner; Girish Rao; David Armstrong; R. Hermon Dowling; Gerard M. Murphy
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 586 KB
- Volume
- 281
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2670
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β¦ Synopsis
An amperometric enzyme electrode for the detection of bile acids using 3-a-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase coupled to an N-methyl phenazinium tetracyanoquinodimethanide electrode @IMPTCNQ) is described. Kinetic analysis shows that the rate limiting step is the transport of substrate through the membrane. The response time of the electrode is less than 5 min and it has a detection limit of 1 PM. The electrode has the advantage over conventional methods of being able to detect the amount of free bile acid in solution. It has been tested in clinically derived samples of gastric aspirate. Excellent agreement has been found between the enzyme electrode and the more cumbersome conventional assay which involves incubation and the spectrophotometric determination of enzymatitally produced NADH. The enzyme electrode has also been used to measure bile acid concentrations in plasma.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The preparation of gas diffusion electrodes and their use in an amperometric enzyme biosensor for the direct detection of a gaseous analyte is described. The gas diffusion electrodes are prepared by covering a PTFE membrane (thickness 250β ΞΌm, pore size 2β ΞΌm, porosity 35%) with gold, pla