Protein method influences on calculation of tissue receptor concentration
- PMID: 3940419
- DOI: 10.1093/ajcp/85.1.37
Protein method influences on calculation of tissue receptor concentration
Abstract
Many protein methods are used for estimation of tissue receptor concentration. The authors compared performance, analytic variability, and accuracy of six protein methods used in these calculations. They found the Lowry protein procedure standardized with bovine serum albumin (BSA), usually considered the reference method, to be the most imprecise and most time consuming method. When the BSA standards from the Lowry procedure were assayed with the other methods, results ranged from 74 to 141% of expected. For three other protein standards, reactivity among the six methods varied almost twofold. Comparison of Lowry protein concentrations in cytosols from 46 tumors biopsies with other methods indicated best agreement was with an automated turbidometric (TCA) or a Coomassie dyebinding procedure. Use of protein standardization for the two direct spectrophotometric procedures decreased overestimation of receptor protein concentrations. Because receptor concentration is the quotient of receptor quantity and protein concentrations, tissue receptor results are dependent in part on standardization and choice of protein method.
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