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Journal of Veterinary Diagnostic Investigation, Vol 18, Issue 4, 326-334
Copyright © 2006 by American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians


Articles

A specific method for measurement of equine active myeloperoxidase in biological samples and in in vitro tests

T Franck, S Kohnen, G Deby-Dupont, S Grulke, C Deby, and D Serteyn

Department of General Anesthesia and Surgical Pathology of Large Animals, Institut Veterinaire, B 41, Universite de Liege, Sart Tilman, BE-4000 Liege, Belgium.

An original method called SIEFED (specific immunological extraction followed by enzymatic detection) was developed for the specific detection of the activity of equine myeloperoxidase (MPO). The method consists of the extraction of MPO from aqueous solutions by immobilized anti-MPO antibodies followed by washing (to eliminate proteins and interfering molecules) and measurement of MPO activity using a detection system containing a fluorogenic substrate, hydrogen peroxide, and nitrite as reaction enhancer. The SIEFED technique was applied to study active MPO in horse biological fluids and the effects of 2 polyphenolic molecules, curcumin and resveratrol, on MPO activity. The detection limit of the SIEFED was 0.23 mU/ml. The SIEFED exhibited good precision with intra-assay and interassay coefficients of variation below 10% and 20%, respectively, for MPO activities ranging from 0.25 to 6.4 mU/ml. The activity of MPO was generally higher than 1 mU/ml in the fluids collected from horses with inflammatory diseases. Curcumin and resveratrol exerted a dose-dependent inhibition on MPO activity and, as they were removed before the enzymatic detection of MPO, the results suggest a direct drug-nzyme interaction or an enzyme structure modification by the drug. The SIEFED is a new tool that would be useful for specific detection of active MPO in complex media and for selection of MPO activity modulators.





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