Quantitation of lysozyme in human milk was performed by a microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassay based on the measurement of the light scattered during the competitive immunoagglutination of a microparticle-lysozyme conjugate with an anti-lysozyme antiserum. This immunoassay has a detection limit of 8 microg/L of reaction mixture and can be performed using diluted milk (1:6000, in reaction mixture), excluding sample pretreatment. Human milk lysozyme can be quantified over the concentration range 0.09-1.50 g/L, with within- and between-run coefficients of variation <5%. Changes in the lysozyme concentration of human milk during lactation were determined in 636 samples. Lysozyme concentrations (mean +/- SE) decreased from colostrum (0.36 +/- 0.02 g/L) to transitional milk (0.30 +/- 0.01 g/L) and mature milk during days 15-42 (0.30 +/- 0.01 g/L), then increased in the mature milk during days 43-56 (0.35 +/- 0.01 g/L) and especially during days 57-84 (0.83 +/- 0.05 g/L). The proportion of lysozyme contributing to total protein was found to rise during lactation and was as follows: colostrum (1.7%), transitional milk (2.3%), and mature milk from days 15-28 (2.7%), days 29-42 (3.1%), days 43-56 (3.8%), and days 57-84 (7.3%). The assay developed for milk was also suitable for the determination of lysozyme in other human body fluids.
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Adv Exp Med Biol
June 2002
GRIP, Immunology Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine, Vandoeuvre les Nancy, France.
Changes in the lactoferrin and lysozyme concentration of human milk during lactation were determined by microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassays of 360 milk samples collected from 64 lactating volunteers. These 360 samples were colostrum from days 1 to 5 postpartum (142 samples), transitional milk from days 6 to 14 (106 samples), and 112 mature milk samples obtained from days 15 to 28 (34 samples), from days 29 to 56 (50 samples) and from days 57 to 84 postpartum (28 samples). The concentration and percentage of lactoferrin vs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Biochem
April 2000
GRIP, Immunology Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine, Nancy, France.
Objectives: Microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassays for six human milk proteins (beta-casein, kappa-casein, alpha-lactalbumin, serum albumin, lactoferrin, and lysozyme) and conventional immunonephelometry assays for immunoglobulin A, C3, and C4 complement proteins were developed and characterized.
Design And Methods: Microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassays are competitive assays based on the nephelometric quantification of the inhibition of microparticle-protein conjugates immunoagglutination by the proteins to be assayed.
Results: High precision (CVs ranged from 1% to 14% in within- and between-assays) and recovery (linear recovery in dilution-overloading assay) ensure a reliable determination of the main human milk proteins by single-step homogeneous nephelometric immunoassays, accurate over wide ranges of concentration.
J Clin Lab Anal
February 2000
Laboratorio de Bioquímica, Hospital San Millán, Logroño, La Rioja, Spain.
A microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassay, based on polystyrene beads coated with antihuman lysozyme antibody, has been developed for lysozyme quantification in sera and pleural effusions. The standard curve extends from 0.58 mg/l to 18.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Lab Anal
November 1999
GRIP, Immunology Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine, Nancy, France.
A microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassay was developed for kappa-casein quantification in human milk. Together with a previously reported beta-casein comparable immunoassay, it was applied to 862 samples milk, collected from 82 mothers, to investigate the changes in casein concentrations in human milk during the first twelve weeks of lactation. kappa-casein immunoassay is sensitive (detection limit in the reaction mixture, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr
July 1999
Groupe de Recherche en Immunopathology, Immunology Laboratory, Faculty of Medicine, Nancy, France.
Background: To investigate the effect of prematurity and parity on the dynamics of the major immunologic and nutritional proteins of human milk over the first 2 weeks of lactation.
Methods: Microparticle-enhanced nephelometric immunoassays were developed for the quantification of alpha-lactalbumin, beta-casein, serum albumin, lactoferrin, and lysozyme in human milk. These components, immunoglobulin A, and total proteins were assayed in 368 individual samples collected from 74 mothers.
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