6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125c28a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Electrothermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometric Diagnosis of Familial Hypercholesterolemia

And Miguel De La GuardiaAgustín PastorErwin KnechtEnrique J. AndreuJosé Javier Martín De Llano

subject

ChromatographyChemistrySpectrophotometry AtomicCholesterol LDLGold ColloidFamilial hypercholesterolemiamedicine.diseaseLigand (biochemistry)Analytical ChemistryHyperlipoproteinemia Type IIMatrix (chemical analysis)PhenotypeReceptors LDLBiochemistryCell cultureCOS CellsLDL receptormedicineAnimalsHumansSaturation vapor curveReceptorLipoprotein

description

We have developed a new nonradioactive assay to identify human low-density lipoprotein receptor defects. It is based on the incubation of cultured cells with colloidal gold-LDL conjugates and quantitation of the gold associated with the cells by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. After an oxidative treatment with nitric and hydrochloric acids, the biological matrix interferes neither with the gold recovery nor with the gold measurements, which are linear, at least from 0.15 to 3 ng of gold. When cells expressing a functional LDL receptor are incubated with increasing amounts of colloidal-gold LDL conjugates, the obtained saturation curve parallels that described when [125I]LDL is used as ligand. Moreover, this new assay allows us to clearly distinguish among fibroblasts from normal subjects or from heterozygous or homozygous patients of familial hypercholesterolemia, a very common autosomal disease. The assay is easy to perform, is sensitive, and avoids the use of radioactive compounds. Therefore, it could be successfully employed in the clinical diagnosis of this disease. Furthermore, since the methodology developed here can be applied to quantify the association of other gold-conjugated ligands to cells, it could have a widespread use in a variety of clinical and basic research studies.

https://doi.org/10.1021/ac991287p