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Clinical Chemistry 20: 566-570, 1974;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 20, 566-570, Copyright © 1974 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Development and Application of a Radioimmunoassay for Plasma Glucagon

Mark A. Sperling 1, Paul V. DeLamater 1, Mirtha Kazenelson 1, Robert H. Fiser 1, and Delbert A. Fisher 1

1 Division of Endocrinology, Department of Pediatrics, University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine, Torrance, Calif. 90509.

We report sensitive radioimmunoassay procedures for glucagon-like immunoreactivity and for pancreatic glucagon, with use of antisera generated in rabbits by the injection of glucagon covalently coupled to thyroglobulin. Optimum assay conditions were determined. These assays have absolute limits of sensitivity of 10 to 20 pg, an intra-assay coefficient of variation of 8%, and an inter-assay coefficient of variation of up to 22%. In human infants 30 minutes after birth, glucagon concentration was 227 ± 27 pg/ml (SEM), and glucagon-like immunoreactivity increased sharply with oral feeding. In children and adolescents, plasma glucagon concentrations during fasting, the increase in response to arginine stimulation, and the suppression after oral glucose loading were similar to values previously reported in adults. Problems inherent in the methodology for measuring plasma glucagon are discussed.


Key Words: pancreatic glucagon and glucagon-like immunoreactivity in plasma • values in newborns, children, adolescents, adults • stimulation and suppression of values • specificity of antisera • hormones

Submitted on November 15, 1973
Accepted on February 19, 1974




The following articles in journals at HighWire Press have cited this article:


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[Abstract] [Full Text]




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