Application of the miniature ultracentrifuge in receptor-binding assays
β Scribed by R.Wayne Albers; Nagaswamy Krishnan
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1979
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 652 KB
- Volume
- 96
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A new binding assay for membrane receptor systems has been developed employing an airdriven ultracentrifuge (Beckman Airfuge). The main advantages of this method for measurement of radioligand binding in aqueous medium are (i) the rapidity (30 s) in separating the bound from the unbound fraction, (ii) the small volume (100 ~1) of assay medium which permits a relatively small excess of ligand over receptor to be employed, and (iii) the simplicity of manipulations which allows a high degree of replication. The variation in a triplicate set of assays is usually less than 0.5%. By virtue of maintaining equilibrium throughout the assay the present method is especially useful for ligands exhibiting rapid reversibility in binding. Binding of [3H]ouabain to several membrane (Na+ ,K+)-ATPases and binding of [3H]etorphine to the opiate receptor from brain membranes are discussed here. Also the inhibition of [3H]ouabain binding by Tris is discussed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Uncaria rhynchophylla and related species (i.e. Gouteng of the Pharmacopoeia of the People's Republic of China) have antihypertensive, sedative and anticonvulsant activities. A methanol extract of 'Gouteng' (U. rhynchopylla) hooks and stems was assessed for its ability to inhibit the binding of radi
Endogenous ligands complicate radioligand-binding assays of high-affinity binding proteins by obscuring binding sites or by diluting the labeled ligand. We have developed a mathematical model for such systems where radioligand and endogenous ligand are structurally identical. Data which relate radio
Plastic test tubes and microplates were used in two miniaturized algal bioassays for comparison with a standard algal operational procedure in glass flasks. All three methods used spectrophotometrical measurements of growth of the green alga Raphidocelis subcapitata after 72 h. ( The EC50 values we