Abstract
An enzymatic assay was developed for the spectrophotometric determination of glycolate in urine and plasma. Glycolate was first converted to glyoxylate with glycolate oxidase, and the glyoxylate formed was condensed with phenylhydrazine. The glyoxylate phenylhydrazone formed was then oxidized with K3Fe(CN)6 in the presence of excess phenylhydrazine, and A515 of the resulting 1, 5-diphenylformazan was measured. Since glycolate oxidase also acts on glyoxylate and L-lactate, the incubation of samples with glycolate oxidase was carried out in 120-170mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.3) to obtain glyoxylate as its adduct with Tris. The pyruvate formed from lactate was removed by subsequent brief incubation with alanine aminotransferase in the presence of L-glutamate, and α-ketoglutarate formed was converted back to L-glutamate by glutamate dehydrogenase and an NADPH generating system. Thus the specificity of the assay relies principally on the substrate specificity of glycolate oxidase, and high sensitivity is provided by the high absorbance of 1, 5-diphenylformazan at 515-520 nm. Plasma was deproteinized with perchloric acid, and then neutralized with KOH. Plasma and urine samples were then incubated with _??_5mM phenythydrazine, and then treated with stearate-deactivated activated charcoal to remove endogenous keto and aldehyde acids as their phenylhydrazones. The normal plasma glycolate and urinary glycolate/creatinine ratio for adults determined by this method are _??_8 μM and _??_0.036, respectively.