BIO303 Biochemistry II
BIO303 Biochemistry II
BIO303 Biochemistry II
Biochemistry – II
LABORATORY MANUAL
DEPARTMENT OF BIOLOGY
VIRTUAL UNIVERSITY OF PAKISTAN
LAHORE
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Contents
Preparation of stock and working solutions in Laboratory
Basic biochemical methods such as iodine test for polysaccharides
Fermentation of sugars by Baker’s yeast
Isolation of amylose and amylopectin from starch
Extraction of glycogen from liver
Acid and enzymatic hydrolysis of glycogen
Extraction and estimation of lipids from plant tissue/seed and lipid separation from
different tissues
Thin Layer Chromatography
Macroscopic analysis of Urine
Estimation of glucose levels in urine
Fehlings Test for glucose estimation
Estimation of albumin levels in urine
Estimation of chloride content in urine
Test for Urinary phosphates Ammonium molybdate test (Test for Urinary
phosphates)
Study of abnormal urine content bile pigment and salts
Liver function tests (LFTs)
Experiment No. 1
Types of solution
Unsaturated solution
A solution that is capable of dissolving more solute at a given temperature than it already contains,
is known as unsaturated solution.
Saturated solution
A saturated solution is the solution which can dissolve no more amount of the solute, at a given
temperature.
Super saturated solution
A solution that contains more dissolved solute than a saturated solution is called super saturated
solution.
Concentration and its units
Concentration means the relative amounts of the components of a solution. It tells the ratio of the
quantity of one component to the quantity of the other or to the total quantity of solution. It has
many units. Some common units are discussed below.
Mass Percentage
The ratio of the mass of the solute to the mass of the solution multiplied by 100 is called mass
percentage.
Mass Percentage of a solute =Mass of the solute x 100
Mass of solution
For liquid-liquid solutions, it is sometimes more convenient to express the concentration in the units
of percentage by volume:
Volume Percentage of a liquid = Volume of the liquid x100
Total volume
Parts per Million (ppm)
This is used to express very dilute concentrations of a substance. One ppm is equal to 1mg of solute
dissolved per litre of solvent or 1mg of solute dissolved per kg of solvent.
Molarity (M)
3
Molarity or the molar concentration is the number of moles of solute dissolved per dm of solution.
3
(1 dm is equal to 1Liter)
Molality (m)
Molality is the number of moles of solute dissolved per kilogram of solvent.
Normality (N)
Normality is the number of equivalents dissolved per liter of solution.
+
pH =-log10[H3O ]
The pH of a neutral solution is 7, the pH of acids is less than 7 while that of bases is higher than
7.
Procedure
i. Preparation of 5% NaCl solution
1. Weigh 5grams of sodium chloride.
2. Dissolve the sodium chloride (NaCl) in 25 ml of distilled water in a beaker with the help of
stirrer.
3. Transfer the contents into a volumetric flask. Add some more water (10-20ml) to the beaker
and rinse the walls of beaker and add that to the same flask.
4. Raise the volume to 100 ml in the volumetric flask to prepare 5% NaCl solution.
5. Check the pH of the solution with pH meter.
C1V1=C2V2
37xV=5x50
V1=250/37
=6.7 ml
Add 6.7ml of HCl to the volumetric flask slowly and raise the volume to 50ml with distilled water to
prepare 50 ml of 5%HCl solution.
Record the pH of the Solution using pH meter or litmus paper.
Experiment No. 2
Theory:
The iodine test is mainly performed to check the presence of carbohydrates among which
starch and sugar are the main carbohydrates found in our food products.
Principles:
To produce the triiodide anion (I3−), elemental iodine is dissolved in an aqueous solution of
potassium iodide. The resulting complex with starch produces an intense "blue-black" colour.
The intensity of the colour decreases with increasing temperature and with the presence of
water-miscible organic solvents such as ethanol. The test cannot be performed at very low
pH due to the hydrolysis of the starch under these conditions. It is now thought that the
iodine-iodide mixture combines with the starch to form an infinite polyiodide homopolymer.
This was rationalized through single crystal x-ray crystallography and comparative Raman
spectroscopy.
Material Required:
Knife, Spatula, Porcelain tile, Iodine solution and Food sample like potato or any other
vegetable or fruit.
Procedure:
Take a fresh potato which is washed, cleaned and dried. Peel off the skin of the potato
as they are impermeable.
Cut the potato into small cubes
With the help of clean and dried spatula, place the potato sample on the clean and
dried porcelain tile.
Add 2 to 3 drops of dilute iodine solution on the potato samples.
Keep the slides undisturbed and observe the change.
Observations:
There will be a change in color. A blue black color develops on the slice or cubes of the
potato samples.
Results:
According to the observation the food sample or the potato slice turned to blue-black
on adding the iodine solution. This proves the presence of starch in the given sample.
Experiment No. 03
Theory:
Apparatus Required:
Beaker 500ml, 4 flasks of 250 ml, burner, tripod stand.
Reagents Required:
Procedure:
Take 5 flask and mark them A, B, C, D and E.
Take 2.5g of yeast and put it in flask B, C and D.
After that add 5g of sucrose in flask A, C and E.
Add 10 gram of sucrose in flask D.
Now add 100ml of distilled water to all flasks.
Now boil only flask C for 5 minutes.
Now close the mouth of all flasks with balloons.
Leave the whole assembly for 24 hours.
Results:
Balloons of flask A,B and C doesn’t blown but the balloons of flask D and E will blow.
This shows that fermentation occur in flask D and E during which CO2 evolved and become
reason of blowing of balloons.
Experiment No. 04
Theory:
Material Required:
Sweet potato, Knife, mortar & pastel, blender, blue capped tubes, 20mM sodium phosphate
buffer at pH 7 and vortex
Procedure:
Theory:
Glycogen is a multibranched polysaccharide of glucose that serves as a form of energy
storage in animals, fungi, and bacteria. The polysaccharide structure represents the main
storage form of glucose in the body. Glycogen functions as one of two forms of energy
reserves, glycogen being for short-term and the other form being triglyceride stores in
adipose tissue (i.e., body fat) for long-term storage. In humans, glycogen is made and stored
primarily in the cells of the liver and skeletal muscle. In the liver, glycogen can make up 5–6%
of the organ's fresh weight, and the liver of an adult weighing 1.5 kg can store roughly 100–
120 grams of glycogen. In skeletal muscle, glycogen is found in a low concentration (1–2% of
the muscle mass) and the skeletal muscle of an adult weighing 70 kg stores roughly
400 grams of glycogen.
Material Required:
TCA, Centrifuge, glass cylinder, centrifuge tubes, 95% ethanol, water bath, Nacl
Procedure:
Results:
Requirements:
1. Heart, liver, and muscle from a freshly killed rat.
2. potassium hydroxide (300 g/l)
3. Calibrated centrifuge tubes (10 ml). 30
4. Boiling water bath. 24
5. Saturated NaS04. 20 ml
6. Ethanol (95% v/v). 250 ml
7. Volumetric flasks (100 ml). 24
8. Test tubes calibrated at 10 ml. 100 ml
9. HCl (1.2 mol/l.). 100 ml
10.Marbles.
11.Phenol red indicator solution. 12 ml
12.NaOH (0.5 mol/l). 250 ml
13.Reagents for the estimation of glucose
Isolation of glycogen:
Accurately weigh the complete heart and muscle and about 1.5 g of liver. Place the tissues
into a calibrated centrifuge tube containing 2 ml of KOH (300 g/l) and heat in a boiling water
bath for 20 min with occasional shaking. Cool the tubes in ice, add 0.2 ml of saturated
Na2SO4, and mix thoroughly. Precipitate the glycogen by adding 5 ml of ethanol (95% v/v),
stand on ice for 5 min, and remove the precipitate by centrifugation. Discard the supernatant
and dissolve the precipitated glycogen in about 5 ml of water with gentle warming, then
dilute with distilled water to the 10 ml calibration mark and mix thoroughly. In the case of
the fed animals, transfer the liver sample quantitatively to a 100 ml volumetric flask and
make up to the mark with water.
Objective:
To examine the polysaccharide nature of glycogen and show that hydrolysis increases the
number of reducing groups.
Introduction:
The structure of the glycogen molecule is fan-like; with long chains of glucose residues linked
by 1, 4-glycosidic bonds, with 1, 6- links at the branch points. So the whole glycogen molecule
has only one free reducing end, where the C1 of a glucose residue is free (exposed). Thus the
glycogen molecule is essentially non-reducing. Hydrolysis converts glycogen from a non-
reducing substance into reducing substances. Hydrolysis of the glycogen molecule with acid
results in splitting of all its glycosidic bonds giving only glucose molecules as the product.
Enzymes are more specific in the bond type they split. Thus salivary amylase (α-amylase) will
randomly split only 1, 4- glycosidic bonds and produce a mixture of products consisting of
glucose, maltose and maltotriose molecules. The increase in the number of reducing groups
is determined using 3, 5-dinitrosalicylic acid (DNS) in alkaline solution. The oxidation of
carbohydrate or related compounds is the main source of energy for many organisms. The
readily digestible carbohydrates of the mammalian diet include the starches, amylase and
amylopectin, as well as glycogen. Amylose is a linear polysaccharides consisting of glucose
units linked to one another in sequence by α-1-4 bonds. Amylopectin and glycogen are
branching polysaccharides, in addition to α-1, 4 bonds, they have α-1, 6- glycosidic bonds at
the branch points. The hydrolysis of these glycosidic bonds is catalyzed by either acids or
enzymes, in the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis there is a random cleavage of bonds, with the
intermediates formation of all the various possible oligosaccharides and with the final
conversion of these oligosaccharides to glucose. In the presence of amylases, which have
been classified into two main groups, α and β according to the mode of their attack on the
polysaccharide. The amylases of animal origin are all α-amylases and in the digestive system
are found in saliva and in pancreatic juice. Α-amylases catalyze the rapid, random hydrolysis
of internal α-1, 4 bonds. They do not hydrolyze α-1, 6 linkages, regardless of molecular size
nor do they hydrolyze maltose. Thus glycogen is initially split by α-amylase action into
branched dextrins of medium molecular weight and only small amounts of maltose are
formed. Further action of α-amylase decreases the molecular weight of these dextrins
yielding oligosaccharides. The final degradation products of the action of α-amylase on
glycogen are glucose, maltose and isomaltose. A second enzyme β-amylases which is widely
distributed in plants and microorganisms, also catalyze the hydrolysis of glycogen. They
catalyze the successive hydrolysis of the second α-1, 4 glycosidic bond from the free
nonreducing ands of glucose chains, releasing maltose units. But β-amylases do not
hydrolyze α-1, 6 bonds, nor do they hydrolyze α-1, 4 bonds of glucose chains beyond an α-1,
6 branch residues. Thus, after all the nonreducing end glucose chains have been trimmed
back to the branch residues, the final products of the action of β-amylase on glycogen are
maltose and the remaining limit dextrin. There are many methods for measuring the
hydrolysis of glycogen and other polysaccharides, such as measurement of reducing sugars,
or change of decreasing viscosity and the loss of capacity to give a blue color with iodine and
finally the formation of split products.
Principle:
Several reagents can be used to assay reducing sugars such as 3, 5 dinitrosalicylic acid in one
of the compounds. In alkaline solution it is reduced to 3-amino-5- nitro salicylic acid, which is
orange-red. Absorbance is determined at 540 nm.
Requirements:
Glycogen Sodium dihydrogen phosphate (NaH2PO4) Sodium hydroxide Sodium chloride
Sodium potassium tartrate 3,5-Dinitrosalicyclic acid ( DNS) HCl Boiling water bath
Spectrophotometer Small beaker Big test tubes (25 ml) Glass cuvettes.
Preparation of solutions:
0.02 M Na phosphate buffer, pH 6.9, containing 0.005 M NaCl (PS buffer):
1. Prepare 500 ml 0.04 M NaH2PO4 (MW 120). Dissolve 2.4 g in water and make up to 500
ml.
2. Prepare 250 ml of 0.04 M NaOH (MW 40). Dissolve 0.4g NaOH in water and make up to
250 ml.
3. 0.005 M NaCl(MW 58.5). Dissolve 0.2925g NaCl in a little water.
To 500ml of the NaH2PO4 solution add 224 ml of the NaOH solution. Mix and measure the
pH.If is less than 6.9 adjust by adding more NaOH solution. Add the NaCl solution and make
up to 1 liter.
Prepare DNS reagent fresh by mixing A and B and making up to 1 liter with
water
2M HCl: Take 16.7 conc. HCl in 100ml volumetric flask and make up to 100 ml with water.
Saliva: Collect about 2 ml saliva in a small beaker. Immediately before use dilute 1: 20 with
the buffer (Take 1ml saliva and add 19.0 ml buffer).
Procedure:
Label nine tubes 1 -9. Pipette 0.4 ml PS buffer in tube 1 and use as blank. Pipette 0.4 ml
glycogen solution into each of the remaining tubes (2-9). Add 0.6 ml 2 M HCl to tube 9 and
incubate in a boiling water bath for 30 min. Add 0.6 ml diluted saliva to each of the remaining
tubes (1-8) and stand at room temperature. Immediately after adding diluted saliva to tube 2
stop action of the enzyme by adding 1 ml of DNS reagent. Stop the reaction in tubes 3-7 at 2
min. intervals and in tube 8 after 30 min in the same manner. After tube 9 has been in water
bath for 30 min. add 1 ml 1.2 M NaOH to neutralize HCl, then add 1ml DNS reagent. Heat all
the tubes for 5 min. in a boiling water bath. Cool by immersing in cold water. Add 8 ml water
to each tube except tube 9. Add 7 ml water to tube 9. Read absorbance at 540 nm against
the blank. NB. Since the amylase content of saliva varies between individuals, in some cases
it may be necessary to make different dilutions of saliva to get reasonable results. You may
therefore have to repeat the experiment.
Results:
Tube 9 contained the total glucose yield from complete hydrolysis of glycogen. Taking this as
100% conversion of glycogen to glucose, plot the percentage hydrolysis against time.
Pipette duplicate 1 ml samples of the glycogen solutions into test tubes calibrated at 10 ml,
add 1 ml of HCl (1.2 mol/l), place a marble on top of each tube, and heat in a boiling water
bath for 2 h. At the end of this period, add 1 drop of phenol red indicator and neutralize
carefully with NaOH (0.5 mol/l) until the indicator changes from yellow through orange to a
pink color. Dilute to 5 ml with distilled water and determine the glucose content by the 3.5
dinitrosalisylic acid method. Then use the standard curve you obtained to estimate the
concentration of glucose per100 g sample.
Experiment No. 07
Extraction and estimation of lipids from plant tissue/seed and lipid separation
from different tissues
Introduction:
Lipids play an important role in various cellular and physiological functions.
Biochemical analysis of lipids requires their isolation. Depending on the type of the sample,
extraction protocols vary considering the tissue structure, texture and lipid contents. The
high sensitivity of some analytical methods employed to measure lipids requires the use of
very pure solvents and clean glassware. Furthermore, all lipids must be protected against
degradation through oxidation by solvent, oxygen, and enzymes in combination with
temperature and light. Lipids can be broadly classified as polar and non polar lipids based on
the head group present.
(Folch Extraction)
Requirements:
(1) Chloroform: Methanol (2:1, v/v), (2) 0.9% NaCl in water, (3) Homogeniser, (4) Lyophiliser
Procedure:
The tissue is homogenised with Chloroform: Methanol (2:1, v/v) to a final volume 20
times the volume of the tissue sample (1 g in 20 ml of solvent mixture).
Agitate the mixture for 15 min in an orbital shaker at RT.
Centrifuge at 14,000 rpm for 10 min to get the clarified supernatant.
Measure the volume of the supernatant and transfer to a fresh tube.
Break phase by adding 0.2 volumes of 0.9% NaCl.
Vortex the tube hard for 1 min.
Centrifuge at a low speed of 2000 rpm to separate the two phases.
Transfer the upper aqueous phase for analysis of ganglio- sides and polar molecules.
Collect the lower organic phase containing lipids in a fresh tube.
Evaporate in a lyophilizer or under a nitrogen stream and store below −80◦C.
Experiment No. 08
Requirements:
(1) TLC plate
(2) Mobile phase solvent
(3) Glass jar
Procedure:
1) Bake the TLC plate in an oven set at 100◦C for 1 hr before use.
(2) Pour the appropriate developing solvent into a glass jar at least one hr before use. This is
to saturate the jar with the running solvent vapors.
(4) Spot the sample and the respective standards onto the plate.
(5) Dip the plate in the running solvent just below the sample load.
(6) Allow the solvent to run due to capillary action till it reaches nearly the end of the plate.
(7) Remove the plate from the jar and let it dry.
(8) Stain the plate for visualization of the compound.
(9) Measure the distance of the solvent and the compound travelled to obtain the Rf values.
Results:
For example, if a compound travels 2.1 cm and the solvent front travels 2.8 cm, the Rf is 0.75:
Rf = 2.1/2.8 = 0.75
Experiment No. 9
Apparatus Required:
Plastic cup with a lid for sample collection, test tubes, test tube holder, dropper, beaker,
litmus paper
Macroscopic Examination
The physical appearance of a urine sample can often tell a great deal about a patient's
condition. A change in color or clarity may indicate the presence of a disease and the need
for additional testing.
COLOR
Color is usually some shade of yellow and often varies with the concentration of the sample.
The most common color descriptions of normal urine are straw, light yellow, yellow and dark
yellow. Amber colored urine is seen in patients with increased bilirubin levels and may
indicate hepatitis.
CLARITY
Clarity is an indication of the transparency of a specimen. It is best to judge clarity by
observing light through a recently mixed sample. Terms used to describe clarity include clear,
hazy, cloudy and turbid. Freshly voided urine that is properly collected is normally clear or
slightly hazy, while contaminated urine is more likely to be hazy. Fresh urine that is cloudy is
often the result of a bacterial urinary tract infection due to white blood cells in the urine.
Turbid urine contains salt crystals that precipitate out as the specimen cooled.
pH
The pH is a measure of the degree of acidity or alkalinity of the urine. A pH below 7 indicates
acidic urine; pH above 7 indicates alkaline urine. Normal, freshly-voided urine may have a pH
range of 5.5 - 8.0. The pH of urine may change with diet, medications, kidney disease, and
metabolic diseases such as diabetes mellitus. Colors on the pH reagent pad usually range
from yellow-orange for acidic pH to green-blue when pH is alkaline.
Experiment No. 10
Theory:
A urine glucose test measures the level of glucose, or sugar, in urine. It is less invasive than a
blood glucose test, but it also tends to be less accurate. High glucose levels often indicate
diabetes, a group of diseases that affects the way the body handles glucose.
A urine glucose test is a quick and simple way to check for abnormally high levels of glucose
in the urine. The most common cause of elevated glucose levels is diabetes, a condition that
affects the ability to manage glucose levels. The symptoms of diabetes include excessive
thirst, blurred vision, and fatigue. When left untreated, diabetes can lead to long-term
complications, including kidney failure and nerve damage. Other diseases with elevated
glucose levels can be renal glycosuria, diabetes, or gestational diabetes.
The normal amount of glucose in urine is 0 to 0.8 mmol/L (millimoles per liter).
Benedict’s Test:
Benedict’s test is used for the detection of reducing sugars(sugar shaving free reactive
carbonyl group) in urine.
Principle:
Glucose is a simple aldehyde sugarwith the molecular formula C6H12O6.
Benedict’s test utilizes a mixture of sodium citrate,copper(II) sulfate and sodium carbonate in
a slightly basic solution. Reducing sugars reduce the copper(II)ionstocopper(I)oxide(Red ppt).
Reagents Required
i. Benedict’s Reagent: Dissolve Sodium Citrate(173g) and anhydrous Sodium
Carbonate(100 g) in about 700ml of distilled water by gently heating the contents.
Dissolve Copper Sulfate (17.3g) in about 100mL of distilled water in a separate
beaker.Transfer this solution gradually in to the Carbonate-Citrate mixture with
constant stirring and raise the volume to1L with distilled water.
ii. Sample: Urine collected from diabetic and healthy subjects.
Procedure:
1. Add 1 mlof samplein a test tube.
Important notes:
Benedict‘s test is a semi quantitative test. The color of the precipitate gives a rough
estimate of the reducing sugars present in the given sample.
Apparatus Required:
Plastic cup with a lid, glass test tubes, holders, droppers, bottles for sample collection,
test tube stand
Reagents Required
Fehling’s solution A and B
Sample: Urine
Procedure:
In a test tube, add 2 ml of the test solution and add equal volumes of Fehling A &
Fehling B and place it in a boiling water bath for few minutes.. When the
contents of the test tube comes to boiling, mix them together and observe any
change in color or precipitate formation. The production of yellow 'or brownish-red
precipitate of cuprous oxide indicates the presence of reducing sugars in the given
sample.
READINGS:
http://www.healthline.com/health/glucose-test-urine
Experiment No. 12
Biuret Test
This test is used for the detection of proteins containing at least two peptide bonds.
Principle
In an alkaline medium, protein reacts with copper (Cu2+)in the Biuret reagent leading
to the formation of violet c o l o r e d complex. This increases the absorbance at
540nm due to that is directly proportional to the concentration of protein.
Biuret complex
Reagents Required
1. 10% sodium hydroxide solution
2. 1% copper sufate solution or Biuret reagent
3. Sample: Urine
Procedure
1. Add 1 ml of urine in a test tube.
2. Add 1 ml of 10% sodium hydroxide solution and 2-3 drops of 1% copper sulfate
solution.
3. Mix well
4. Appearance of violet color will indicate presence of proteins in the sample.
PRECAUTIONS:
1. Protect eyes fromsplash of the reagent.
2. Use automated pipettes and dispensing devices.
Procedure:
i. Fill test tube with urine (2/3 full) centrifuge.
ii. Heat the upper 2cm of the urine and observe the cloudiness. (Due to phosphates not
albumin ).
iii. Add 2 to 3 drops of 10% acetic acid .
iv. Cloudiness due to phosphates will disappear.
v. Repeat the heating. Persistent cloudiness indicates albumin. (Proteinuria)
Results:
If cloudiness developed at 40-60° C and disappears upon boiling but reappears on
cooling, the protein present is called Bence-Jones protein. This protein is encountered
in: Hyperglobulinemia - A condition characterized by abnormally large amounts of
globulins in the blood. And in Multiple myeloma - also known as plasma cell myeloma,
is the second-most common cancer of the blood.
Procedure:
i. Place 5ml urine in a test tube. Place cover.
ii. Shake the urine vigorously for 3 mins.
iii. If Bilirubin is present, the foam produced will have a yellow to light green color.
iv. In patients with proteinuria, bilirubin bound to albumin can also appear in urine.
READINGS:
http://www.healthline.com/health/glucose-test-urine
Martin H., 2011. Laboratory Measurement of Urine Albumin and Urine Total
Protein in Screening for Proteinuria in Chronic Kidney Disease.Clin.Biochem. Rev.
Vol 32
Experiment No. 13
Principle:
AgNO3 reacts with the chloride in urine to precipitate AgCl. Any excess AgNO 3 reacts
with Potassium Chromate to form reddish ppt. of Ag 2CrO4 (Silver chromate). The
appearance of which indicates end point of reaction.
Procedure:
i. Place 10 drops of urine to a test tube and one drop CrO4 solution as indicator.
ii. Add drop by drop 2.9% AgNO3 solution until a permanent red brown color (end point)
is developed.
iii. Number of drops consumed represent amount of chloride present. Normally 6 to12
drops.
iv. May indicate Hyperchloremia if it exceed 12.
Experiment 14
Test for Urinary phosphates Ammonium molybdate test (Test for Urinary
phosphates)
Principle:
Upon warming with ammonium molybdate in the presence of nitric acid, inorganic
phosphates are precipitated as canary yellow ammonium phosphomolybdate.
Procedure:
i. To 3 ml of urine, add a few drops of concentrated nitric acid and a pinch of ammonium
molybdate.
ii. Warm it.
iii. Observe the yellow color of the precipitate.
OBSERVATION TABLE:
S. No. EXPERIMENT OBSERVATION INFERENCE
1
2
3
4
5
PRECAUTIONS:
1. Use clean and dry glassware.
2. Avoid regents to be splashed in eyes.
Experiment No. 16
PROCEDURE:
Take 0.25mL reagent1 in a test tube and incubate at 37ºC for 5minutes. Now add 0.05mL
serum and mix it well and again incubate it 37ºC for 60 minutes. Add 2.5mL of solution 1 in
this mixture (also given in table).
Mix well and allow to stand at Room Temperature (15 -30 ºC) for 10 minutes and take the
reading (OD) aginst purified water on a colorimeter using a Green filter or on Photometer at
505 nm.
PROCEDURE FOR STANDARD CURVE
As the reaction proceeds with time, more amounts of products are formed. Since the end
products inhibit the enzyme, there is more of Inhibition. This Is the major problem with
colorimetric methods for the estimation of this enzyme. On the other hand In Kinetic
methods, since the enzyme activity is measured during the Initial few minutes, the amount of
products formed during that short time are negligible to cause any Inhibition. Because of the
above problem, it is necessary to standardize any colorimetric method against a Standard
kinetic method. So this standardization is done against the Standard Karmen Unit Assay
(Kinetic) and this is extrapolated to different amounts of Pyruvate and this has been
thoroughly rechecked. At this point it is important to not ethat the Standard graph of Enzyme
activity (lU) on x-axis vs. Odon Y-axis is not alinearone, which shows that O.D. increases with
increases in enzyme activity at a decreasing rate. A Sample Curve is given in Fig.
It is not necessary to plot Standard curve every time at estis performed. It should be plotted
initially when the first test is performed.
Subsequently, periodic checking can be done by running only a couple of tubes viz.tubes,1
and 3 of the following table and their OD can be compared with the original curve. Each
laboratory should establish its own standard curve as per the below mentioned procedure
table.
Tube No. 1 2 3 4 5
Assigned Enzyme activity ( IU/L) 0 24 61 114 190
Reagent to be pipette Volume in mL
Reagent 1 0.5 0.45 0.4 0.35 0.3
Reagent 4 - 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2
Purified Water 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1
Reagent 2 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5
Mix well and allow to stand at Room Temperature (15 - 30· C) for 20
Solution I 5.0 5.0 5.0 5.0 5. 5.0
0
Mix well by inversion. Allow to stand at Room Temperature (15-30ºC) for 10 minutes and
measure the O.Do fall the five tubes against purified water on a colorimeter with a green
filter or on photometer at 505 nm. Plot a standard graph by taking enzyme activity on X-axis
and O.D. on Y-axis
OBSERVATION TABLE:
CALCULATIONS:
Mark the reading (OD) of Test (T) on the Y axis of the Standard curve and extrapolate it
to the corresponding enzyme activity on X-axis.
PRECAUTIONS:
1) Serum Samples must be completely free from haemolysis, since RBCs are very rich in
this enzyme.
Haemolysis leads to the release of large amount of the enzyme and hence gives
erroneous results.
2) Avoid the use of detergents to clean glassware.
3) Use clean and dry glassware.
NOTES:
1)Serum samples can be store dat2-8·C (Refrigerator) for 5 days without any
substantial loss of the enzyme activity.
2) A separate Blank is not necessary, since tube No.1 of Standard curve
substitutes the Blank
3) If the enzyme activity is more than 190 units, repeat the Test using the
Serum diluted1:5(or more if necessary) with Normal Saline and multiply the
final result so obtained with an appropriate factor.
NORMAL VALUES:
The normal range of values for AST (SGOT) is from 5 to 40 units per liter of
serum (5-40 IU/L)
The normal range of values for ALT (SGPT) is from 7 to 56 units per liter of
serum.