Analytical artifacts in radioimmunoassay of L-thyroxin in human milk.
Open Access
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Chemistry
- Vol. 28 (6) , 1277-1282
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/28.6.1277
Abstract
Previous results are contradictory regarding the concentration of thyroxin in human milk. Using a sensitive radioimmunoassay, we have found a lack of parallelism between the standard curve for thyroxin and the curve for serial dilutions of whole human milk, skimmed milk, or ethanol extracts of milk. Nonspecific binding also indicated the presence of analytical artifacts. Thus we have separated thyroxin from other milk components by means of a strongly basic Bio-Rad anion-exchange resin with quaternary ammonium exchange groups attached to a styrene divinyl benzene copolymer lattice, radioimmunoassaying the fractions eluted with an equivolume mixture of acetic acid and water. Parallelism with the standard curve was good, and results were the same whether or not the resin eluate was further purified by paper chromatography. The range of thyroxin concentration in 21 samples of human milk was 0.29-2.00 micrograms/L (mean 0.71, SD 0.40, microgram/L). Such concentrations are unlikely to afford protection to the developing brain of a breast-fed athyreotic baby, as previously claimed.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Levels of Corticosterone-Binding Proteins in Rat Milk and Coincidental Serum, and the Dissociation Rates of the Corticosterone • Protein Complexes*Endocrinology, 1981
- Evidence against a Major Role of L-Thyroxine at the Pituitary Level: Studies in Rats Treated with Iopanoic Acid (Telepaque)*Endocrinology, 1980
- Presence of triiodothyronine, no detectable thyroxine and reverse triiodothyronine in human milk.Endocrinologia Japonica, 1979
- Thyroxine, tri-iodothyronine, and reverse tri-iodothyronine concentrations in human milkThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1978
- THYROXINE CONCENTRATION IN HUMAN MILKJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1977
- Identification of Corticosteroid-Binding Globulin in Human Milk: Measurement with a Filter Disk AssayJournal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1976
- A quantitative method for the separation of thyroid hormones and related compounds from serum and tissues with an anion-exchange resinBiochemical Journal, 1959