Cholesterol oxidase: sources, physical properties and analytical applications

J MacLachlan, ATL Wotherspoon, RO Ansell… - The Journal of steroid …, 2000 - Elsevier
J MacLachlan, ATL Wotherspoon, RO Ansell, CJW Brooks
The Journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology, 2000Elsevier
Since Flegg (HM Flegg, An investigation of the determination of serum cholesterol by an
enzymatic method, Ann. Clin. Biochem. 10 (1973) 79–84) and Richmond (W. Richmond, The
development of an enzymatic technique for the assay of cholesterol in biological fluids,
Scand. J. clin. Lab. Invest. 29 (1972) 25; W. Richmond, Preparation and properties of a
bacterial cholesterol oxidase from Nocardia sp. and its application to enzyme assay of total
cholesterol in serum, Clinical Chemistry 19 (1973) 1350–1356) first illustrated the suitability …
Since Flegg (H.M. Flegg, An investigation of the determination of serum cholesterol by an enzymatic method, Ann. Clin. Biochem. 10 (1973) 79–84) and Richmond (W. Richmond, The development of an enzymatic technique for the assay of cholesterol in biological fluids, Scand. J. clin. Lab. Invest. 29 (1972) 25; W. Richmond, Preparation and properties of a bacterial cholesterol oxidase from Nocardia sp. and its application to enzyme assay of total cholesterol in serum, Clinical Chemistry 19 (1973) 1350–1356) first illustrated the suitability of cholesterol oxidase (COD) for the analysis of serum cholesterol, COD has risen to become the most widely used enzyme in clinical laboratories with the exception of glucose oxidase (GOD). The use is widespread because assays incorporating the enzyme are extremely simple, specific, and highly sensitive and thus offer distinct advantages over the Liebermann-Burchard analytical methodologies which employ corrosive reagents and can be prone to unreliable results due to interfering substances such as bilirubin. Individuals can now readily determine their own serum cholesterol levels with a simple disposable test kit. This review discusses COD in some detail and includes the topics: (1) The variety of bacterial sources available; (2) The various extraction/purification protocols utilised in order to obtain protein of sufficient clarification (purity) for use in food/clinical analysis; (3) Significant differences in the properties of the individual enzymes; (4) Substrate specificities of the various enzymes; (5) Examples of biological assays which have employed cholesterol oxidase as an integral part of the analysis, and the various assay protocols; (6) New steroidal products of COD. This review is not a comprehensive description of published work, but is intended to provide an account of recent and current research, and should promote further interest in the application of enzymes to analytical selectivity.
Elsevier