| Literature DB >> 15080757 |
Hyug-Han Kim1, Yongchao Zhang, Adam Heller.
Abstract
Laccase, a copper enzyme catalyzing the four-electron reduction of O(2) to water, has been shown by others to be a useful label in enzyme-linked immunoassays, in which the substrate is ambient O(2) instead of an added chemical, such as hydrogen peroxide, or a phosphate ester of a phenol. Laccase-catalyzed O(2) reduction is, however, inhibited by halides, which complex the enzyme's copper ions. Replacement of laccase by bilirubin oxidase, a copper enzyme retaining its maximal activity at high chloride concentrations and at pH 7.2, allows enzyme-amplified affinity assays with O(2) as the substrate in neutral-pH chloride solutions, exemplified here by the assay of DNA, the duplexes of which are unstable at low ionic strength but are stable in strong NaCl solutions.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15080757 DOI: 10.1021/ac035487j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Chem ISSN: 0003-2700 Impact factor: 6.986