A rapid and easy to perform method for determining oxidized metallothionein (MT) is described. The main features of the procedure are that oxidized MT is converted into native MT with 2 -mercaptoethanol as reducing agent and \(\mathrm{Zn}^{2+}\) as metal donor, and MT is subsequently quantifled via
Quantitation of Cu-containing metallothionein by a Cd-saturation method
✍ Scribed by Dominik Klein; Rüdiger Bartsch; Karl H. Summer
- Book ID
- 102988603
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 568 KB
- Volume
- 189
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
A rapid and sensitive method for determining Cu-containing metallothionein (MT) is described. The main features of this Cd-saturation assay are: high-molecular-weight Cd-binding compounds are denatured with acetonitrile (50% final concentration), Cu bound to MT is removed with ammonium tetrathiomolybdate, excessive tetrathiomolybdate and its Cu complexes are removed with DEAE-Sephacel, apothionein is saturated with Cd, and excessive Cd is bound to Chelex 100. The thiomolybdate assay is capable of reliably detecting 14 ng MT and thus is particularly suitable for measuring MT in small tissue samples (e.g., biopsies), in extrahepatic tissues, and in cultured cells. Moreover, the combination of the thiomolybdate assay with the recently developed Cd-Chelex assay also makes it possible to determine the portion of MT which binds Cu (Cu load of MT), provided that the amount of non-Cu-thionein exceeds 100 ng, the detection limit of the Cd-Chelex assay.
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