Login / Signup

Spectrophotometric versus spectrofluorometric assessment in the study of the relationships between lipid peroxidation and metabolic dysregulation.

Anca UngurianuOana ȘeremetDaniela GrădinaruConstantin Ionescu-TîrgovișteDenisa Marilena MarginaRucsandra Dănciulescu Miulescu
Published in: Chemical biology & drug design (2019)
Reactive oxygen species are crucial to normal cell function, but are also part of the pathogenesis of multiple modern maladies. As such, sensitive, fast, and reliable methods of appreciating redox status are needed. We aimed to optimize the Amplex Red (AR) and ferric-xylenol orange (FOX) methods using human serum samples, rat tissue homogenates, and mitochondrial preparations. For AR, we intended to reduce probe concentration, maintaining method sensitivity, as well as extending its use from isolated lipoproteins samples, and readjust it for a high-throughput application. Also, we evaluated the usefulness of a modified xylenol orange-based spectrophotometric protocol, comparing and contrasting these methods in terms of clinical relevance and suitability for their further use in assessing redox status of various biological samples in different pathological conditions. Our results show that these optimized protocols are suitable for complex in vivo studies, as they require low quantities of sample and reagents, and are sensitive, rapid, and economical, with the option of adapting them for high-throughput analysis. For a better assessment of oxidative status of serum-derived samples, the two methods can be used concurrently, while for tissue-derived ones, either can be employed for the measurement of a global redox status.
Keyphrases
  • high throughput
  • reactive oxygen species
  • oxidative stress
  • randomized controlled trial
  • high resolution
  • sensitive detection