Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 22: 1850-1854, 1976;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 22, 1850-1854, Copyright © 1976 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

An 125I-labeled cortisol radioimmunoassay in which serum binding protein are enzymatically denatured

MJ Hasler, K Painter and GD Niswender

We report an iodine-125 radioimmunoassay for cortisol in biological fluids, in which interfering binding proteins are enzymatically denatured. An antiserum to cortisol-3-carboxymethyloxime-bovine serum albumin, extremely low cross-reacting with other corticosteroids, was raised in rabbits. A cortisol-3-carboxymethyloxime tyrosine methyl ester derivative was synthesized and labeled with iodine-125 by standard radioiodination techniques. To eliminate the need for extraction and recovery procedures, we digested interfering binding witha proteolytic enzyme, which then was heat-inactivated before adding the labeled derivative and the premixed, preincubated antiserum complex. There was quantitative analytical recovery of esogenous cortisol added to sera from a normal man, a normal woman, and a pregnant woman. Values for the same samples agreed after extraction and chromatographic purification and agreed well with values obtained by other techniques by independent reference laboratories. The five-step assay can be done in 6 h or less.





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Copyright © 1976 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.