Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 30: 1851-1853, 1984;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 30, 1851-1853, Copyright © 1984 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

A new technique for studying the relationship between maternal diabetes and the sialic acid content of fetal pulmonary surfactant

T Delahunty

By adapting a standard method for precipitation of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol with phosphotungstic acid (PTA) and Mg2+, fetal pulmonary surfactant can be rapidly isolated from human amniotic fluid, 97% of the total disaturated phosphatidylcholine being precipitated from the sample. The lecithin/sphingomyelin ratio for 17 separate specimens correlated reasonably well (r = 0.76) with the concentration of disaturated phosphatidylcholine in the PTA precipitate. Using thiobarbituric acid as the chromophore, I measured sialic acid in the PTA precipitate after overnight treatment with neuraminidase. The sialic acid/protein ratio for the PTA precipitate was identical to that for the surfactant, as isolated by ultracentrifugation. The concentrations of insulin and C-peptide were significantly greater in specimens of amniotic fluid from mothers with diabetes than from non- diabetic mothers (p less than 0.001). When the specimens were segregated according to a C-peptide cutoff value of 4 micrograms/L, there was a small, significant decrease in PTA-precipitated concentrations of sialic acid in the samples with C-peptide greater than 4 micrograms/L. The results suggest a possible mechanism for the increased incidence of respiratory distress among infants born to diabetic mothers.





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Copyright © 1984 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.