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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 28, 2423-2426, Copyright © 1982 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
JH Bovaird, TT Ngo and HM Lenhoff
Horseradish peroxidase, assayed with o-phenylenediamine, is irreversibly inactivated when incubated in phosphate buffer, 100 mmol/L, at pH 5. The inactivation depends on both duration and incubation and phosphate concentration. Phosphate was the most potent inactivator and citrate the least potent of a series of buffers tested. The inactivation is not attributable to ionic strength per se or to Na+ or K+. The observed inactivation did not occur at high concentrations (2500 nmol/L, 0.1 g/L) of enzyme; however, this "protective" effect could not be reproduced by adding bovine serum albumin or a surfactant (Tween 20) to lower concentrations of enzyme. The inactivation was independent of commercial source of the enzyme or the kind of chromogenic assay used. On the basis of this information, we optimized the assay so that it gave eightfold greater absorbance values than those reported by others. The improved assay was sensitive to as little as 0.4 pmol/L (16 ng/L) of peroxidase, and was linear over the range of 0.4 to 5 pmol/L (16-200 ng/L).
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