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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 21, 420-424, Copyright © 1975 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Biomedical Research Laboratories, Calbiochem, 10933 N. Torrey Pines Rd., La Jolla, Calif. 92037.
A procedure for enzymatic determination of serum triglycerides [Clin. Chem. 19, 476 (1973)] has been
adapted for use in continuous-flow analysis (Technicon
AutoAnalyzer). A very simple manifold is used; serum is
incubated at 37 °C with the lipase and
-chymotrypsin
in potassium phosphate buffer (0.1 mol/liter, pH 7, containing 1.50 g of bovine serum albumin per liter). The liberated glycerol is dialyzed against the complete glycerol
reagent. The change in absorbance at 340 nm resulting
from oxidation of NADH is proportional to the dialyzed
glycerol. The same manifold can be used to determine
preformed glycerol if the hydrolyzing enzymes are omitted. The lipase used need not be extensively purified because the dialyzer removes coloring material and contaminating enzymes that would interfere with the components of the glycerol reagent in the manual procedure. The hydrolysis is complete, as shown by the use
of equivalent glycerol standards. No prior treatment of
the samples is necessary. Assays are run at 60 per
hour in the AutoAnalyzer I, 80 per hour in the AutoAnalyzer II. Results with both instruments for 150 samples
correlated well with those obtained by the same enzymatic manual method and by the AutoAnalyzer fluorometric procedure.
Submitted on June 24, 1974
Accepted on December 24, 1974
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