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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 27, 1554-1557, Copyright © 1981 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
LD Bowers and PR Johnson
Urinary estriol measurement has been widely accepted as a useful indicator of fetoplacental status. Classically, glucuronide conjugates of estriol have been cleaved with soluble beta-glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31) before extraction and measurement. We have developed a system in which urine is injected directly into a "high-performance" liquid chromatograph and the conjugates are cleaved on-line in an immobilized beta-glucuronidase reactor. Estriol is quantitated with fluorescence detection after separation from other interfering species with a reversed-phase column. The stability of the immobilized enzyme under storage conditions and in the presence of the mobile phase are discussed. Only 150 mL/L methanol could be pumped through the reactor and onto the analytical column, but this allowed on-column preconcentration of the free estriol produced. Gradient elution bypassing the immobilized enzyme reactor eluted the compounds of interest without damaging the enzyme. Comparison with radioimmunoassay results yielded a slope of 0.97 (r = 0.996, n = 19).
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S. W. Toennes and H. H. Maurer Efficient Cleavage of Conjugates of Drugs or Poisons by Immobilized {beta}-Glucuronidase and Arylsulfatase in Columns Clin. Chem., December 1, 1999; 45(12): 2173 - 2182. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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