A fragment of the human beta-chain of hemoglobin (HEM), hHEM beta 111-146, was shown to have broad antimicrobial properties. The 3.9-kDa peptide was postulated to occur in high concentrations in placenta tissue. We established a reliable method to quantify hHEM beta 111-146 in placenta tissue. Our methodology consists of a tissue extraction step (step 1), a chromatographic enrichment step (step 2), and a final quantification step (step 3) by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The specificity of the ELISA reaction was confirmed by parallel analysis of the samples via Western blot (step 4). The ELISA measured the absorbance of a tetramethylbenzidine substrate at 450 nm. It showed no cross-reactivity with the corresponding gamma- and alpha-HEM regions and low cross-reactivity with the beta-HEM region and full-length HEM. The sample preparation procedure enabled a prepurification of hHEM beta 111-146, completely eliminating cross-reactive proteins and HEM peptides. The linear range of detection in step 3 was 20-200 ng/well (200-2000 mu g/L) with a limit of quantification of 23 ng/well (230 mu g/L) and a limit of detection of 7 ng/well (70 mu g/L). The assay was characterized by good linearity (r(2) > 0.99), intraday precision (coefficient of variation [CV] = 2.2-8.3%), interday precision (CV = 1.8-9.1%), and accuracy (76-109%). The mean recovery of the ELISA was determined to be 97%, and the overall recovery during steps 1-3 was found to be 40.3 +/- 2.5%. We measured concentrations from 0.28 to 0.74 mg/g placenta tissue of the hHEM beta 111-146 in different placenta samples with an average concentration of 0.57 mg/g. This abundant concentration supports an important physiological role of hHEM beta 111-146 in the placenta infective barrier. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.