Quantification of human diamine oxidase

Autor: Karin Petroczi, Helen Szoelloesi, Bernd Jilma, Otto Majdic, Elisabeth Gludovacz, Andrea Quaroni, Peter Valent, Nicole Borth, Thomas Boehm, Sophie Pils
Rok vydání: 2017
Předmět:
Zdroj: Clinical Biochemistry. 50:444-451
ISSN: 0009-9120
Popis: Objectives Diamine oxidase (DAO) is essential for extracellular degradation of histamine. For decades activity assays with inherent limitations were used to quantify the relative amounts of DAO. No reference DAO standard is available. Absolute DAO amounts cannot be determined. Controversy exists, whether DAO is circulating or not in non-pregnant individuals. The role of DAO as biomarker in various diseases is ambiguous. It is not clear, whether precise quantification of human DAO antigen using commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) is possible. The objective was to develop a precise and robust ELISA to quantify DAO in various biological fluids. Design and methods A research prototype ELISA was established using a mouse monoclonal antibody for capturing and a polyclonal rabbit serum IgG fraction for the detection of human DAO. The limit of blank (LoB), limit of detection (LoD) and estimated limit of quantification (eLoQ) and normal DAO concentrations in serum and plasma were determined. Results The LoB, LoD and eLoQ derived from 42 standard curves are 0.27, 0.48 and 0.7 ng/mL respectively. The detection range using the LoD as the lower and the highest DAO standard as the upper boundary is 0.5 to 450 ng/mL. Serum and plasma mean/median concentrations are between 0.5 and 1.5 ng/mL in healthy volunteers (n = 58) and mastocytosis patients (n = 19) and plateau at approximately 145 ng/mL (n = 16) during pregnancy. Accurate quantification was not influenced by heparin (DAO is a heparin-binding protein), lipaemic or hemolytic serum. The measured DAO antigen concentrations are in close agreement with published enzymatic activity data using radioactive putrescine as substrate. Conclusions This research prototype ELISA is able to reliably and accurately quantify human DAO in different biological fluids. The potential of DAO as biomarker in various diseases can be evaluated.
Databáze: OpenAIRE