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bioassay

 
Dictionary: bi·o·as·say   ('ō-ăs'ā', -ă-sā') pronunciation
 
n.
  1. Determination of the strength or biological activity of a substance, such as a drug, by comparing its effects with those of a standard preparation on a test organism.
  2. A test used to determine such strength or activity.
tr.v., , -sayed, -say·ing, -says.

To cause to undergo a bioassay.


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A method for the quantitation of the effects on a biological system by its exposure to a substance, as well as the quantitation of the concentration of a substance by some observable effect on a biological system. The biological material in which the effect is measured can range from subcellular components and microorganisms to groups of animals. The substance can be stimulatory, such as an ion increasing taxis behavior in certain protozoans, or inhibitory, such as an antibiotic for bacterial growth. Bioassays are most frequently used when there is a number of steps, usually poorly understood, between the substance and the behavior observed, or when the substance is a complex mixture of materials and it is not clear what the active components are. Bioassays can be replaced, in time, by either a more direct measure of concentration of the active principle, such as an analytical method (for example, mass spectrometry, high-pressure liquid chromatography, radioimmunoassay), or a more direct measurement of the effect, such as binding to a surface receptor in the case of many drugs, as the substance or its mechanism of action is better characterized.

Assays to quantitate the effects of an exposure model the effect of a substance in the real world. Complex biological responses can be estimated by laboratory culture tests, which use, for example, bacteria or cells cultured in a petri dish (usually to model an effect either on the organism of interest, such as bacteria, or on some basic cellular function); by tissue or organ culture, which isolates pieces of tissue or whole organs in a petri dish (usually to model organ function); or in whole animals (usually to model complex organismic relationships).


 
Food and Nutrition: bioassay
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Biological assay; measurement of biologically active compounds (e.g. vitamins and essential amino acids) by their ability to support growth of micro-organisms or animals.

 

A technique in which the presence of a chemical is quantified by comparing its effects on living organisms with the effects of a known standard.

 
Veterinary Dictionary: bioassay
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Determination of the active power of a drug sample by comparing its effects on a live animal or an isolated organ preparation with those of a reference standard.

 
Wikipedia: Bioassay
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Bioassay is a shorthand commonly used term for biological assay and is a type of scientific experiment. Bioassays are essential in the development of new drugs, and monitoring pollutants in the environment.

Biological Standardisation or Bioassay's are procedures by which the potency or the nature of the substance is estimated by studying its effects on Living matter.

Contents

Introduction

Bioassays are typically conducted to measure the effects of a substance on a living organism. Bioassays may be qualitative or quantitative. Qualitative bioassays are used for assessing the physical effects of a substance that may not be quantified, such as abnormal development or deformity. An example of a qualitative bioassay includes Arnold Adolph Berthold's famous experiment on castrated chickens. This analysis found that by removing the testes of a chicken, it would not develop into a rooster because the endocrine signals necessary for this process weren't available. Quantitative bioassays involve estimation of the concentration or potency of a substance by measurement of the biological response that it produces. Quantitative bioassays are typically analyzed using the methods of biostatistics.

Definition

"It is the comparable estimation of the nature, constitution or potency of the active principles with that of the standard drug, by means of the reaction on a living matter such as whole animal, isolated tissue or organism

Purpose

  1. measurement of the pharmacological activity of new or chemically undefined substances
  2. investigation of the function of endogenous mediators
  3. determination of the side-effect profile, including the degree of drug toxicity
  4. measurement of the concentration of known substances (alternatives to the use of whole animals have made this use obsolete)
  5. assessing the amount of pollutants being released by a particular source, such as wastewater or urban runoff.

Types

Bioassays are of two types:

Quantal

Tha quantal assay is "all or none phenomenon". For example: Insulin induced hypoglycemic convulsive reaction and on the cardiac arrest caused by digitalis. In both the cases, the end point is an all or none response eg- either convuslion occurs or doesnt occur,, similarly is with cardiac arrest.

Graded

These are based on the observations that there is a proportionate increase in the observed response with a subsequent increase in the concentration or dose. The parameters employed in such bioassays are based on the nature of the effect the substance is expected to produce. For example: contraction of smooth muscle preparation for assaying histamine or the study of blood pressure response in case of adrenaline.

The graded Bioassay can be performed by employing any of the below mentioned techniques. The choice of the procedures depends on the:

  1. precision of the assay demands
  2. quantity of the sample available
  3. availability of the experimental animals

Techniques

  1. Matching Bioassay
  2. Interpolation Method
  3. Bracketting Method
  4. Multiple Point Bioassay
  5. Six Point Assay

Environmental bioassays

Environmental bioassays are generally a broad-range survey of toxicity, and a toxicity identification evaluation is conducted to determine what the relevant toxicants are. Although bioassays are beneficial in determining the biological activity within an organism, they can often be time-consuming, laborious, and organism-specific factors may result in data that isn't applicable to others in that species. For these reasons, other biological techniques are often employed, including radioimmunoassays. See bioindicator.

Water pollution control requirements in the United States require some industrial dischargers and municipal sewage treatment plants to conduct bioassays. These procedures, called whole effluent toxicity tests, include acute toxicity tests as well as chronic test methods. The methods involve exposing living aquatic organisms to samples of wastewater.[1] [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Washington, DC. "Methods for Measuring the Acute Toxicity of Effluents and Receiving Waters to Freshwater and Marine Organisms." October 2002. Document No. EPA-821-R-02-012.
  2. ^ US EPA. "Whole Effluent Toxicity / Clean Water Act Analytical Methods." Accessed December 16, 2008.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sci-Tech Encyclopedia. McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Food and Nutrition. A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. Copyright © 1995, 2003, 2005 by A. E. Bender and D. A. Bender. All rights reserved.  Read more
Sports Science and Medicine. The Oxford Dictionary of Sports Science & Medicine. Copyright © Michael Kent 1998, 2006, 2007. All rights reserved.  Read more
Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bioassay" Read more