AI Article Synopsis

  • LX are a type of eicosanoid derived from arachidonic acid via lipoxygenase transformation and have strong anti-inflammatory properties.
  • Although previous studies demonstrated their presence in biological contexts, limited research has been conducted on their clinical implications, particularly regarding their urinary excretion using LXA(4) ELISA kits that suffered from specificity issues.
  • The development of a new extraction method has improved the detection of LXA(4) in urine, revealing for the first time the presence of immunoreactive LXA(4) in healthy individuals and paving the way for further clinical research into these compounds.

Article Abstract

LX are tetraene-containing eicosanoids generated by lipoxygenase (LO) transformation of arachidonic acid (Serhan and Romano, 1995). LX possess potent anti-inflammatory activity in vivo, and temporal biosynthesis of LX, concurrent with spontaneous resolution, has been observed during exudate formation (Levy et al, 2001). Limited results are currently available on the involvement of LX in clinical settings. Recently, a rabbit anti-LXA(4) antiserum has been raised to produce an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) kit for LXA(4) (Levy et al, 1993). Although specific and accurate with isolated cells, this kit has not been tested with complex biological matrix such as urine. Initial attempts to determine urinary excretion of LXA(4) using the LXA(4) ELISA kit were unsuccessful because of high unspecific absorbance readings. In this report, we show that the LXA(4) extraction procedure indicated in the ELISA kit is inadequate for urinary measurements of immunoreactive (i)LXA(4). We present the development of a new extraction technique, more selective for LX, that abolishes background contamination and minimizes the unspecific readings. Using this method, we show for the first time that urine from healthy subjects contain (i)LXA(4) material and identify a urinary tetraene with the physical properties of a LXA(4) metabolite. Although reliable methods have been previously established to quantitate LXA(4) from whole blood (Brezinski et al, 1992), the present extraction technique, which optimizes for LXA(4) recovery from human urine, represents a substantial achievement for LX investigation and may open a new avenue of clinical studies on LXA(4).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.lab.0000028823.53486.4aDOI Listing

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