Literature DB >> 22444544

New development in in-capillary electrophoresis techniques for kinetic and inhibition study of enzymes.

Hala Nehme1, Reine Nehme, Pierre Lafite, Sylvain Routier, Philippe Morin.   

Abstract

Enzymes are often quantified by measuring their biological activity. Capillary electrophoresis is gaining its position in this field due to the ongoing trend to miniaturize biochemical assays. The aim of this work was to compare pre-capillary (off-line) and in-capillary electrophoresis techniques for studying enzymatic activity. The β-galactosidase (β-Gal) was chosen as a model enzyme. Each technique was optimized independently in order to decrease analyte consumption (to few tens of nanoliters), incubation time (to few seconds) and analysis time (below 1 min). Several experimental parameters (ionic strength of the background electrolyte (BGE) and of the incubation buffer, incubation time, injected volumes, …) were optimized by following peak efficiencies, resolution and repeatability. To monitor the performance of each technique, the catalytic constants (V(max) and K(m)) of 4-nitro-phenyl-d-galactopyranoside (PNPG) hydrolysis by β-Gal as well as the inhibition constants (K(i) and IC(50)) by a competitive inhibitor 2-nitrophenyl-1-thio-β-d-thiogalactopyranoside (ONPTG) were determined. The results obtained were cross compared and were also evaluated by comparison to a standard spectrophotometric method. EMMA proved to be the best technique in terms of sample consumption and speed. The short-end injection was successfully used which speeded-up electrophoretic analysis (<0.8 min). It is a very powerful tool for studying enzymatic inhibition. Usually, the inhibitor is injected in the capillary mixed to the substrate especially when both have similar mobilities. We show in this work, for the first time, that combining at-inlet reaction with EMMA-CE allows enzyme inhibition to be realized without any prior mixing of the substrate and the inhibitor. This approach is very interesting for screening inhibitors, rapidly and without excessive substrate consumption.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22444544     DOI: 10.1016/j.aca.2012.02.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chim Acta        ISSN: 0003-2670            Impact factor:   6.558


  4 in total

1.  Capillary electrophoresis-based assay of phosphofructokinase-1.

Authors:  Andrew Malina; Sherrisse K Bryant; Simon H Chang; Grover L Waldrop; S Douglass Gilman
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  2014-02-15       Impact factor: 3.365

Review 2.  Advances in enzyme substrate analysis with capillary electrophoresis.

Authors:  Srikanth Gattu; Cassandra L Crihfield; Grace Lu; Lloyd Bwanali; Lindsay M Veltri; Lisa A Holland
Journal:  Methods       Date:  2018-02-27       Impact factor: 3.608

3.  Kinetic analysis of the transphosphorylation with creatine kinase by pressure-assisted capillary electrophoresis/dynamic frontal analysis.

Authors:  Masanori Mine; Hitoshi Mizuguchi; Toshio Takayanagi
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2021-01-21       Impact factor: 4.142

Review 4.  Clinical and pharmaceutical applications of affinity ligands in capillary electrophoresis: A review.

Authors:  Chenhua Zhang; Ashley G Woolfork; Kyungah Suh; Susan Ovbude; Cong Bi; Marawan Elzoeiry; David S Hage
Journal:  J Pharm Biomed Anal       Date:  2019-09-12       Impact factor: 3.935

  4 in total

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