A continuous spectrophotometric assay for the determination of diamondback moth esterase activity.

Arch Insect Biochem Physiol

Beneficial Insects Research Unit, KSARC, Agricultural Research Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Weslaco, Texas 78596, USA.

Published: October 2003

AI Article Synopsis

  • Conventional methods for assessing esterase activity involve hydrolyzing a substrate, quenching the reaction, and forming a dye complex to measure product concentration, but they focus on the dye rather than the actual product, 1-naphthol.
  • A new assay continuously tracks the formation of 1-naphthol during the reaction, providing a fast and sensitive measurement of esterase activity from diamondback moths within 1-10 minutes.
  • The assay results indicate specific enzyme parameters (K(m) and V(max)) for 1-naphthyl acetate at 37°C, and also identify azadirachtin as a reversible competitive inhibitor of esterase activity.

Article Abstract

Conventional methods to determine esterase activity from insects are composed of a three-step process where the enzyme is allowed to hydrolyze a 1-naphthyl acetate substrate, that reaction is quenched by a SDS detergent, and then a Fast Blue B dye complex is formed with 1-naphthol, the product of 1-naphthyl acetate hydrolysis. These methods measure dye-product complex rather than the product, 1-naphthol. A new assay is presented that continuously monitors the formation of 1-naphthol with the hydrolysis of an esterase substrate. The esterase activity was determined as the slope of the linear regression change in absorbance over time at 320 nm. The continuous assay provides a simple, rapid, and sensitive method for measuring esterases extracted from a single diamondback moth in 1-10 min. The detection limit of the assay is approximately 0.6 microM 1-naphthol. The 1-naphthol product from the esterase reaction was confirmed by HPLC analysis. According to the assay, the K(m) and V(max) values of the esterase were 28 +/- 2 microM and 6.0 +/- 0.1 microM/min, respectively, at 37 degrees C for 1-naphthyl acetate. The K(i) value was 9 +/- 2 microM using azadirachtin, an insecticide from neem tree, Azadirachta indica (A.Juss). Azadirachtin was a reversible competitive inhibitor of the esterase activity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/arch.10103DOI Listing

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