Precursor forms of the alpha-subunit of inhibin are abundant in human follicular fluid and possibly plasma, although their function is uncertain. We now describe the development of a new enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to measure inhibin forms containing both the pro and alpha C regions of the alpha-subunit. The assay has a detection limit for purified human pro-alpha C of 0.5 pg/mL and less than 0.02% cross-reaction with recombinant forms of inhibin, activin, and follistatin. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting of follicular fluid extracts demonstrated that the assay is likely to detect pro-containing precursor forms of both the free alpha-subunit and intact dimeric inhibin. The serum concentration was measured in normal men (446 +/- 28 pg/mL), postmenopausal women (45.8 +/- 3.8 pg/mL), and women treated with FSH before in vitro fertilization (1827 pg/mL). Pooled human follicular fluid contained 488 ng/mL. The mean serum concentration in the female menstrual cycle rose from 150.6 +/- 26.1 pg/mL in the early follicular phase to 692.2 +/- 113 pg/mL in the midluteal phase. This assay offers a useful tool for investigation of the role of inhibin-related proteins in human reproduction. There may be particular clinical value under circumstances in which other assays for inhibin forms have insufficient sensitivity.
We have used DNA amplification fingerprinting (DAF) to study the genetic variation of bermudagrass (Cynodon) species and cultivars of interspecific crosses that exhibit leaf-blade textural characteristics ranging from coarse to fine. Arbitrary octamer primers produced complex and reproducible amplification profiles with high levels of polymorphic DNA. Phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (PAUP) and unweighted pair group cluster analysis using arithmetic means (UPGMA) grouped 13 bermudagrass cultivars into several clusters, including one containing the African-type bermudagrasses (C. transvaalensis) and another containing the common-type bermudagrasses (C. dactylon). The latter group included C. magennissii ('Sunturf') and a interspecific C. transvaalensisxC. dactylon cross ('Midiron'), 2 cultivars that exhibited leaf textural characteristics closer to the common-types. All other C. transvaalensisxC. dactylon crosses grouped between the African and common types. An extended screen of 81 octamer primers was needed to separate cultivar 'Tifway' from the irradiation-induced mutant 'Tifway II'. The use of either template endonuclease digestion prior to amplification or arbitrary mini-hairpin primers increased detection of polymorphic DNA and simplified the task of distinguishing these closely related cultivars. Alternatively, the use of capillary electrophoresis (CE) resolved fingerprints adequately and detected products with high sensitivity, thereby promising to increase throughput and the detection of polymorphic DNA. When used to fingerprint samples from commercial sources, DAF identified bermudagrass plant material on the basis of unique reference profiles generated with selected primers. DAF represents an excellent technique for bermudagrass cultivar verification, seed certification, varietal protection, and for the identification of mistakes in plantings, mislabeled plant materials, and contamination or substitutions of sod fields.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays were designed to amplify 56- and 99-base regions of the pmoA gene from Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b and Methylomicrobium albus BG8, two species of methanotrophic bacteria that are of interest for monitoring bioremediation activity. The PCR product sizes are in a mass range that is accessible to analysis by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. A rapid purification procedure using commercially available reversed-phase cartridges was applied prior to MALDI-TOF analysis. A small aliquot (1.5%, 1.5 microL) from a single 100-microL PCR reaction was sufficient for reliable detection. No cross-amplification products were observed when primers designed for one bacterial species were used with genomic DNA of the other species. The methodology described here has potential to allow less expensive and faster characterization of the ability of microbial populations to destroy pollutants in groundwater and soil at contaminated industrial sites.
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