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Total antioxidant capacity assay of human serum using copper(II)-neocuproine as chromogenic oxidant: The CUPRAC method

✍ Scribed by Apak, Reşat; Güçlü, Kubilay; Özyürek, Mustafa; Karademi˙r, Saliha Esi˙n; Altun, Mehmet


Book ID
120366506
Publisher
Informa plc
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
365 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
1071-5762

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✦ Synopsis


Background:

Tests measuring the combined antioxidant effect of the nonenzymatic defenses in biological fluids may be useful in providing an index of the organism's capability to counteract reactive species known as prooxidants, resist oxidative damage and combat oxidative stress-related diseases. the selected chromogenic redox reagent for the assay of human serum should be easily accessible, stable, selective, respond to all types of biologically important antioxidants such as ascorbic acid, alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene, reduced glutathione (gsh), uric acid and bilirubin, regardless of chemical type or hydrophilicity. currently, there is no rapid method for total antioxidant assay of human serum meeting the above criteria.

Methods:

Our recently developed cupric reducing antioxidant capacity (cuprac) spectrophotometric method for a number of polyphenols and flavonoids using the copper(ii)-neocuproine reagent in ammonium acetate buffer was now applied to a complete series of plasma antioxidants for the assay of total antioxidant capacity (tac) of serum, and the resulting absorbance at 450 nm was recorded either directly (e.g. for ascorbic acid, alpha-tocopherol and glutathione) or after incubation at 50 degrees c for 20 min (e.g. for uric acid, bilirubin and albumin), quantitation being made by means of a calibration curve. the lipophilic antioxidants, alpha-tocopherol and beta-carotene, were assayed in dichloromethane (dcm). lipophilic antioxidants of serum were extracted with n-hexane from an ethanolic solution of serum subjected to centrifugation. hydrophilic antioxidants of serum were assayed after perchloric acid precipitation of proteins in the centrifugate.

Results:

The molar absorptivities, linear ranges and trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (teac) coefficients of the serum antioxidants were established with respect to the cuprac spectrophotometric method, and the results (teac, or teac coefficients) were evaluated in comparison to the findings of the abts/teac reference method using persulfate as oxidant. as for hydrophilic phase, a linear correlation existed between the cuprac and abts findings (r=0.58), contrary to current literature reporting that either serum orac or serum ferric reducing antioxidant potency (frap) does not correlate at all with serum teac. the analytical responses of serum antioxidants were shown to be additive, enabling a tac assay. the intra- and inter-assay cvs were 0.7 and 1.5%, respectively, for serum.

Conclusions:

The cuprac assay proved to be efficient for glutathione and thiol-type antioxidants, for which the frap test was nonresponsive. the findings of cuprac completely agreed with those of abts-persulfate for lipophilic phase. the additivity of absorbances of all the tested antioxidants confirmed that antioxidants in the cuprac test did not chemically interact among each other so as to cause an intensification or quenching of the theoretically expected absorbance. as a distinct advantage over other electron-transfer based assays (e.g. folin, frap, abts, dpph), cuprac is superior in regard to its realistic ph close to the physiological ph, favourable redox potential, accessibility and stability of reagents and applicability to lipophilic antioxidants as well as hydrophilic ones.


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Bio-Assays for Oxidative Stress Status |
Bio-Assays for Oxidative Stress Status || IN VIVO TOTAL ANTIOXIDANT CAPACITY: COMPARISON OF DIFFERENT ANALYTICAL METHODS11Mention of a trade name, proprietary product, or specific equipment does not constitute a guarantee by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and does not imply its approval to the exclusion of other products that may be suitable.Address correspondence to: R. L. Prior, Ph.D., USDA, ARS, HNRCA, 711 Washington St., Boston, MA 02111, USA; Tel: (617) 556–3311; Fax: (617) 556-3222; E-Mail: [email protected]. Ronald Prior is a Nutritionist and Laboratory Chief of the Phytochemical Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging (HNRCA) at Tufts University, Boston, MA. Dr. Prior received his B.S. degree with honors from the University of Nebraska and he received his Ph.D. in Nutrition and Biochemistry from Cornell University in 1972. Dr. Prior has worked with the USDA for more than 20 years.During the past 12 years at the HNRCA, he has been Scientific Program Officer and has directed research activities dealing with the role of flavonoid and other phenolic food components on antioxidant status, their metabolism, and relationships to diseases of aging.Guohua Cao, M.D., Ph.D., is currently a Scientist II at HNRCA. Dr. Cao studied medicine in Nantong Medical College in 1979 and at Nanjing Medical University in 1984. He obtained his Ph.D. in nutritional biochemistry from Beijing Medical University in 1990. Dr. Cao came to the United States in 1991 and worked at NIH where he was instrumental in developing the ORAC method.
✍ PRIOR, RONALD L. 📂 Article 📅 2001 🏛 Elsevier 🌐 English ⚖ 986 KB

This work contains over thirty chapters by leading researchers in the field of oxidative biology, originally presented as articles in an extended Forum in the highly-cited journal, *Free Radical Biology & Medicine*. The papers in this Forum (or Symposium-in-print) spanned seven issues of the journal