• Home
  • Posts Tagged'ACIDIFICATION'

Posts Tagged ‘ACIDIFICATION’

Optimisation of the quantification of glutamine synthetase and myelin basic protein in cerebrospinal fluid by a combined acidification and neutralisation protocol






Abstract: The measurement of proteins in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) is becoming increasingly important in the diagnosis of many neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer”s Disease. However, detection of proteins in these immunoassays can be hampered by confounding factors either present in the sample matrix or inherent to the protein of interest. These confounding factors may, for example, include protein aggregation or binding to other proteins resulting in epitope masking. Furthermore, the pH of CSF may vary considerably amongst different samples which may limit standardisation of CSF analysis. Pre-treatment of CSF to liberate epitopes or optimise conditions for antibody binding may enhance protein detection. In the current study we investigated whether CSF acidification followed by neutralisation (in short: AFBN) or neutralisation alone prior to measurement might improve the detection of a panel of brain-specific proteins. We demonstrate that the AFBN pre-treatment protocol for CSF significantly enhances the measurement of glutamine synthetase (GS) and myelin basic protein (MBP) in CSF but does not affect detection of glial fibrillary protein (GFAP), amyloid β 42 (Aβ42), total tau (t-tau) or phosphorylated tau (p-tau). Neutralisation alone did not improve detection of any of the proteins tested. Based on our results, we suggest including the AFBN protocol in the evaluation of new biomarker development protocols to avoid confounders such as CSF pH or epitope-masking of the target protein. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]


Read More
 

Development of subfossil daphnia and chaoborus assemblages in relation to progressive acidification and fish community alterations in sw sweden

Dated sediment cores from acidified and fishless Lake Gaffeln and Lake Härsvatten, SW Sweden, were analyzed for Daphnia ephippia and Chaoborus mandibles to test whether acidification history and fish extirpations could be reconstructed in a paleo-study using these easily identifiable animal remains. According to monitoring data fish were lost in both lakes from the 1950s to the 1970s. Progressive acidification prior to monitoring was confirmed by a gradual decrease and eventual loss of Daphnia ephippia in both study lakes during the first half of the twentieth century. In Lake Gaffeln mandibles of C. obscuripes appeared immediately after fish loss in 1973, and the regular presence of this species confirmed the succeeding fishless state of this lake. In Lake Härsvatten sediments C. obscuripes appeared only recently, i.e. three decades after fish extirpation, showing that the absence of C. obscuripes mandibles is not a trustworthy indicator of fish presence. Hence, the appearance of C. obscuripes was not temporally related to fish loss but confirmed the present fishless condition. Known historical presence of cyprinid fish in Lake Gaffeln was confirmed by a significantly higher proportion of fragmented mandibles of C. flavicans compared to the historically cyprinid-free Lake Härsvatten. In addition, both lake profiles displayed zero-proportions of fragmented mandibles during fishless periods. We conclude that acidification history and fish extirpations can be inferred by integrated studies on subfossil Daphnia ephippia and Chaoborus mandibles. However, during extreme ultra-oligotrophic conditions in acidified clear-water lakes subfossil Chaoborus mandibles may be too scarce to infer fish absence/presence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Read More
 
© 2012 Academic Articles
Some items on this website are used by permission granted in the Fair Use guidelines of the 1976 U.S. Copyright Act.