A new approach is introduced for the comparison of molecular packing and the identification of identical crystal structure motifs. It has been tested on data sets for the solid forms of benzamide, cabergoline and trospium. In this approach, the packing similarity is calculated using a simple formula involving the distances between molecular centres and the relative orientations of molecular entities inside a finite molecular cluster. The approach is independent of the atomic labelling, the unit‐cell parameters, the space group setting and the number of molecules in the asymmetric part of the unit cell. Owing to its low sensitivity to volume changes, this approach allows the comparison of various solid forms (such as polymorphs, hydrates, solvates, co‐crystals or salts) of identical or similar molecular compounds. The method is also suitable for identifying similar results from direct space methods, which are often used in powder diffraction.
Simvastatin, or (1S,3R,7S,8S,8aR)-8-[2-[(2R,4R)-4-hydroxy-6-oxo-3,4,5,6-tetrahydro-2H-pyran-2-yl]ethyl]-3,7-dimethyl-1,2,3,7,8,8a-hexahydronaphthalen-1-yl 2,2-dimethylbutanoate, C(25)H(38)O(5), is almost isostructural with lovastatin, and the general conformational features are closely related to those of other reported crystal structures of statins. The only hydrogen bond present facilitates the formation of infinite chains of molecules along the b axis.
I describe a simple enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the quantitation of Factor VIII-related antigen in plasma with use of commercially available peroxidase-labeled antiserum and solid-phase support. Regression analysis of 85 plasma samples analyzed by this technique (y) and by a commonly used electroimmunoassay (Anal. Biochem. 15: 45-52, 1966) (x) gave the equation y = 0.223 + 0.77x (r = 0.973). The present method was also compared with enzyme immunoassay in which a phosphatase-labeled antiserum prepared in our laboratory was used; the correlation between the two assays was very good. The simplicity and specificity of the ELISA technique should make it a useful alternative to the more difficult and time-consuming Laurell method.
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