Journal article

Equivalency calculation of unknown enzyme inhibitors in situ the adsorbent of effect-directed autograms


Authors listAzadniya, E.; Morlock, G.E.

Publication year2019

Pages4939-4945

JournalAnalytical Methods

Volume number11

Issue number38

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1039/C9AY01465A

PublisherRoyal Society of Chemistry


Abstract

Reliable biochemical quantification of the enzymatically produced signals of enzyme inhibitors has recently been achieved in situ an assay-containing chromatographic bed, i.e. the adsorbent of an effect-directed autogram. As most of the enzyme inhibitors discovered in a complex sample are unknown or unidentified, external standard calibration cannot be performed, and their inhibition potency needs to be estimated by alternative means. Thus, herein, two different modes of equivalency calculation, referring to a potent inhibitor that was either applied or developed, were investigated, validated and compared, exemplarily for acetyl- and butyrylcholinesterase (AChE/BChE) inhibition zones in the Peganum harmala (P. h.) seed extract. Moreover, three potent inhibitors, i.e. physostigmine (PHY), rivastigmine and piperine, were considered for equivalency calculation. With regard to their hR(F) value, band shape and inhibition brightness against the plate background, the properties of PHY were most similar to those of the unidentified inhibitors in the P. h. seed extract, and thus, it was selected as a reference. The HPTLC-AChE assay with 1-naphthyl acetate as a substrate and Fast Blue B salt as a chromogenic reagent was suitable to reveal the potential differences between the two modes of equivalency calculation due to its low limits of detection. Quantification was studied via PHY zones that were applied versus developed on a high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) plate. Both intraday precision and reproducibility showed the same trend, i.e. the equivalency calculation via the developed PHY bands was more repeatable than that via the applied PHY bands. The steeper slope of the calibration curve of the developed PHY bands offered a more sensitive quantification. The resulting equivalent inhibition of the ChE inhibitors in 1 mu g per band of P. h. seed extract showed a bias of ca. 30% when calculated via the applied versus developed PHY bands, whereby the total AChE-to-BChE inhibition ratio (ca. 2.4) of the ChE inhibitors in 1 mu g per band of P. h. seed extract remained almost the same. As a result, the enzyme inhibition equivalency calculated via the developed reference bands was more reliable and sensitive than that calculated via the applied reference bands. When a faster procedure (applied band pattern) is selected for routine equivalency calculation as a compromise, a potential bias has to be taken into account.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleAzadniya, E. and Morlock, G. (2019) Equivalency calculation of unknown enzyme inhibitors in situ the adsorbent of effect-directed autograms, Analytical Methods, 11(38), pp. 4939-4945. https://doi.org/10.1039/C9AY01465A

APA Citation styleAzadniya, E., & Morlock, G. (2019). Equivalency calculation of unknown enzyme inhibitors in situ the adsorbent of effect-directed autograms. Analytical Methods. 11(38), 4939-4945. https://doi.org/10.1039/C9AY01465A


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 16:19