I have been writing up a document on enzymatic stop-time (endpoint) assays for the benefit of students who are undertaking them for the first time. In stop-time assays one lets the reaction run for a fixed time, then adds a stopping solution (or does something else to quench the reaction). Often the assay is a spectrophotometric one using a chromogenic substrate and a product that is a chromophore. One thing that I noticed from reviewing various textbooks and articles is that some authors recommend two kinds of blanks. One is a no-enzyme blank, and the other is a zero-time blank. My question concerns the rationale behind the zero-time blank, which contains all reagents but is stopped as soon as all of the reagents have been added.
The no-enzyme blank will be nonzero under at least two conditions that I can think of, when there is a contaminating chromophore in the substrate, and when there is a non enzymatic rate of reaction. The zero-time blank will also be positive in the first case, but it will obviously not allow one to see whether or not the second case is a significant problem. One author says that this control checks for interferences from the enzyme itself. Any thoughts on the advantages of performing both controls, as opposed to just the no-enzyme blank?