Development of an assay for bioactive insulin.
1998
A method to detect the biological activity of serum insulin has been developed. This method, called a bioactive insulin assay, determines the ability of serum insulin to stimulate the autophosphorylation of insulin receptors in an intact cell system. For this, intact Chinese hamster ovary cells which overexpress the human insulin receptor are treated with serum and then lysed. Autophosphorylation of the insulin receptors is then measured by a two-site immunofluorometric assay using monoclonal anti-insulin receptor antibodies and europium-labeled anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. The detection limit of this assay is 1 μU/ml of insulin. Dilution and recovery test inter- and intraassay coefficient variations are permissible. The amount of insulin determined by this assay correlated well with the amount of insulin detected by a traditional immunological assay for insulin (r= 0.94,P< 0.001). In the case of a mutant insulin, the insulin from a Wakayama subject, the biologically active insulin was found to constitute 9% of the immunologically reactive insulin. Since this assay specifically measures the amount of biologically active insulin present in serum, it should be particularly useful in monitoring active insulin in patients with various mutant insulins.
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