Brimijoin_1986_Mayo.Clinic.Proc_61_522

Reference

Title : Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria: erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase deficit analyzed by immunoassay and fluorescence-activated sorting - Brimijoin_1986_Mayo.Clinic.Proc_61_522
Author(s) : Brimijoin S , Hammond PI , Petitt RM
Ref : Mayo Clinic Proceedings , 61 :522 , 1986
Abstract :

An immunodisplacement assay based on a specific, solid-phase monoclonal antibody was designed to measure acetylcholinesterase in tissue extracts. Sample enzyme content was determined from the competitive reduction of binding of a purified acetylcholinesterase standard, with a detection limit of 5 ng or less. Washed erythrocyte membranes from six normal subjects averaged 1.8 units of acetylcholinesterase activity and 0.45 microgram of acetylcholinesterase content per milligram of total protein. Enzyme activity and content in samples from three patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) were reduced approximately in parallel, by as much as 70%. The residual cholinesterase had almost the same homospecific activity as the normal enzyme and was bound with equivalent affinity by six different antibodies. Therefore, the cholinesterase defect was dominated by enzyme loss rather than by structural abnormalities affecting enzyme function. Fluorescence-activated sorting of antibody-labeled erythrocytes revealed a bimodal population distribution. Up to 66% of the PNH cells lacked cholinesterase, and the rest had a near-normal enzyme content. Inasmuch as enzyme-deficient cells represent the complement-sensitive population, cell sorting may help in assessing clinical status and, perhaps, in developing new therapeutic modalities for PNH.

PubMedSearch : Brimijoin_1986_Mayo.Clinic.Proc_61_522
PubMedID: 3520169

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Citations formats

Brimijoin S, Hammond PI, Petitt RM (1986)
Paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria: erythrocyte acetylcholinesterase deficit analyzed by immunoassay and fluorescence-activated sorting
Mayo Clinic Proceedings 61 :522

Brimijoin S, Hammond PI, Petitt RM (1986)
Mayo Clinic Proceedings 61 :522