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Highly sensitive assay of okadaic acid using protein phosphatase and paranitrophenyl phosphate

✍ Scribed by Jean François Simon; Jean-Paul Vemoux


Book ID
102964949
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
719 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
1056-9014

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

A colorimetric phosphatase‐inhibition bioassay was developed for the quantitative measurement of okadaic acid (OA) the main diarrhetic toxin responsible for diarrhetic shellfish poisoning. The assay used an artificial substrate, paranitrophenylphosphate, and a semi‐purified protein phosphatase PP2A~c~ containing extract prepared from rabbit muscle. Calibration dose‐inhibition curves were constructed using standard OA and they permitted easy determination of the enzyme concentration E~t~ in their linear portion. In the range of linearity, the slope increased when E~t~ decreased, thus giving a detecting limit of 0.04 pmol in the reaction mixture (1 ml). The lowest assayable concentration of OA was 4 ng/ml in aqueous solutions and 40 ng/ml (i.e., 100 ng of OA per g of mussel tissue) in crude methanol mussels extracts. The infra and interassay coefficients of variation in the measurement of OA for the toxin spiked aqueous samples averaged, respectively, 7.7% and 3.7%, and interexperiments coefficients of variation for the toxin spiked mussel extracts averaged 4.6%. The presence of OA was ascertained by a method in which one assay was performed at two or three different levels of enzyme concentration. The rapidity, accuracy, reproducibility, specificity, and simplicity of the procedure provides a simple way to assay okadaic acid in buffered or complex solutions. © 1994 wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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