29,456 research outputs found
Liquid chromatographic strategies for separation of bioactive compounds in food matrices
Nowadays, there is an increasing attention for nutraceuticals and, in general, bioactive compounds naturally present in food. Indeed, the possibility of preserving human health and preventing disease (e.g., cardiovascular diseases, cancer etc.) by the intake of healthy food is attractive for both consumers and food industries. In turn, research in this field was also prompted significantly, with the aim of characterizing these bioactive compounds and ascribe to them a specific activity. The bioactive compounds can belong to several chemical classes. However, their chemical diversity and presence in complex matrices, such as food, make it challenging both their isolation and characterization. To tackle this issue, efficient separation systems are needed, which are mainly based on chromatography. In this context, this mini-review aims to provide the reader with an overview of the most relevant and recent approaches for the separation of the most common bioactive compounds in food, in particular polyphenols, phenols, carotenoids, and peptides, by liquid chromatography approaches. © 2018 by the authors
Microfluidic tools for multidimensional liquid chromatography
Het onderzoek in dit proefschrift richt zich op de ontwikkeling van een microfluïdische component, namelijk een micromixer die kan worden geïmplementeerd voor de verbetering van two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC), gebruikt voor de analyse van complexe monsters. Het bekende probleem van de mobiele fase incompatibiliteit tussen dimensies in 2D-LC vereist het gebruik van een menginrichting op de interface om mobiele fasesamenstellingen aan te passen. Een mixer moet daarom zorgen voor het snel mengen in lijn bij verschillende stroomsnelheidsverhoudingen voor een breed bereik van stroomsnelheden, een klein volume hebben en bestand zijn tegen korte drukpulsen tot een paar honderd bar, vanwege de aansluiting op schakelkleppen gebruikt om monster tussen kolommen over te brengen. De auteur beschrijft het ontwerp en de realisatie van een micromixer op basis van chaotische advectie, een mechanisme voor vermenging dat verstoring van de laminaire stroming binnen een microkanaal met zich meebrengt, met behulp van groeven in de vorm van een visgraat die een circulerend of wervelend stromingspatroon loodrecht op de richting van stroming veroorzaken. Dit verhoogt het contactoppervlak tussen de twee oplossingsstromen, waardoor het mengproces wordt versneld. De micromixer werd in verschillende materialen gerealiseerd. Voor het bewijs van het mengconcept werd het vervaardigd in poly (dimethylsiloxaan) (PDMS) met behulp van soft-lithografie. Om te voldoen aan de strenge drukvereisten, werd een micromixer vervaardigd uit een blok gesmolten siliciumdioxide met behulp van Selective Laser-Induced Etching (SLE) en in cyclisch olefinecopolymeer (COC) met behulp van micromilling, die met succes in 2D HILIC × RP-LC-systeem voor analyse van nylon monsters werd geïmplementeerd
Multidimensional separation prior to mass spectrometry: Getting closer to the bottom of the iceberg
While prefractionation has previously been shown to improve results in MS
analysis, a novel combination provides an additional dimension of separation:
protein fractionation by SDS-PAGE followed by IEF of tryptic peptides before
separation by RP-LC [Atanassov and Urlaub, Proteomics 2013, 13, 2947-2955].
This three-step separation procedure prior to MS/MS substantially increases
proteome coverage and represents a further step toward a more comprehensive
analysis of complex proteomes
No evidence for a culturable bacterial tetrodotoxin producer in Pleurobranchaea maculata (Gastropoda: Pleurobranchidae) and Stylochoplana sp. (Platyhelminthes: Polycladida)
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is a potent neurotoxin found in the tissues of many taxonomically diverse organisms. Its origin has been the topic of much debate, with suggestions including endogenous production, acquisition through diet, and symbiotic bacterial synthesis. Bacterial production of TTX has been reported in isolates from marine biota, but at lower than expected concentrations. In this study, 102 strains were isolated from Pleurobranchaea maculata (Opisthobranchia) and Stylochoplana sp. (Platyhelminthes). Tetrodotoxin production was tested utilizing a recently developed sensitive method to detect the C9 base of TTX via liquid chromatography—mass spectrometry. Bacterial strains were characterized by sequencing a region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene. To account for the possibility that TTX is produced by a consortium of bacteria, a series of experiments using marine broth spiked with various P. maculata tissues were undertaken. Sixteen unique strains from P. maculata and one from Stylochoplana sp. were isolated, representing eight different genera; Pseudomonadales, Actinomycetales, Oceanospirillales, Thiotrichales, Rhodobacterales, Sphingomonadales, Bacillales, and Vibrionales. Molecular fingerprinting of bacterial communities from broth experiments showed little change over the first four days. No C9 base or TTX was detected in isolates or broth experiments (past day 0), suggesting a culturable microbial source of TTX in P. maculata and Stylochoplana sp. is unlikely
Mass Spectrometry-based Methods for Phosphorylation Site Mapping of Hyperphosphorylated Proteins Applied to Net1, a Regulator of Exit from Mitosis in Yeast
Prior to anaphase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Cdc14 protein phosphatase is sequestered within the nucleolus and inhibited by Net1, a component of the RENT complex in budding yeast. During anaphase the RENT complex disassembles, allowing Cdc14 to migrate to the nucleus and cytoplasm where it catalyzes exit from mitosis. The mechanism of Cdc14 release appears to involve the polo-like kinase Cdc5, which is capable of promoting the dissociation of a recombinant Net1·Cdc14 complex in vitro by phosphorylation of Net1. We report here the phosphorylation site mapping of recombinant Net1 (Net1N) and a mutant Net1N allele (Net1N-19m) with 19 serines or threonines mutated to alanine. A variety of chromatographic and mass spectrometric-based strategies were used, including immobilized metal-affinity chromatography, alkaline phosphatase treatment, matrix-assisted laser-desorption post-source decay, and a multidimensional electrospray mass spectrometry-based approach. No one approach was able to identify all phosphopeptides in the tryptic digests of these proteins. Most notably, the presence of a basic residue near the phosphorylated residue significantly hampered the ability of alkaline phosphatase to hydrolyze the phosphate moiety. A major goal of research in proteomics is to identify all proteins and their interactions and post-translational modification states. The failure of any single method to identify all sites in highly phosphorylated Net1N, however, raises significant concerns about how feasible it is to map phosphorylation sites throughout the proteome using existing technologies
Differential neuroproteomic and systems biology analysis of spinal cord injury
Acute spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating condition with many consequences and no known effective treatment. Although it is quite easy to diagnose traumatic SCI, the assessment of injury severity and projection of disease progression or recovery are often challenging, as no consensus biomarkers have been clearly identified. Here rats were subjected to experimental moderate or severe thoracic SCI. At 24h and 7d postinjury, spinal cord segment caudal to injury center versus sham samples was harvested and subjected to differential proteomic analysis. Cationic/anionic-exchange chromatography, followed by 1D polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was used to reduce protein complexity. A reverse phase liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry proteomic platform was then utilized to identify proteome changes associated with SCI. Twenty-two and 22 proteins were up-regulated at 24 h and 7 day after SCI, respectively; whereas 19 and 16 proteins are down-regulated at 24 h and 7 day after SCI, respectively, when compared with sham control. A subset of 12 proteins were identified as candidate SCI biomarkers - TF (Transferrin), FASN (Fatty acid synthase), NME1 (Nucleoside diphosphate kinase 1), STMN1 (Stathmin 1), EEF2 (Eukaryotic translation elongation factor 2), CTSD (Cathepsin D), ANXA1 (Annexin A1), ANXA2 (Annexin A2), PGM1 (Phosphoglucomutase 1), PEA15 (Phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes 15), GOT2 (Glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase 2), and TPI-1 (Triosephosphate isomerase 1), data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD003473. In addition, Transferrin, Cathepsin D, and TPI-1 and PEA15 were further verified in rat spinal cord tissue and/or CSF samples after SCI and in human CSF samples from moderate/severe SCI patients. Lastly, a systems biology approach was utilized to determine the critical biochemical pathways and interactome in the pathogenesis of SCI. Thus, SCI candidate biomarkers identified can be used to correlate with disease progression or to identify potential SCI therapeutic targets
Analyzing peptides and proteins by mass spectrometry: principles and applications in proteomics
Podeu consultar el llibre complet a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/32166The study of proteins has been a key element in biomedicine and biotechnology because of their important role in cell functions or enzymatic activity. Cells are the basic unit of living organisms, which are governed by a vast range of chemical reactions. These chemical reactions must be highly regulated
in order to achieve homeostasis. Proteins are polymeric molecules that have
taken on the evolutionary process the role, along with other factors, of control
these chemical reactions. Learning how proteins interact and control their up and
down regulations can teach us how living cells regulate their functions, as well as
the cause of certain anomalies that occur in different diseases where proteins are
involved. Mass spectrometry (MS) is an analytical widely used technique to study
the protein content inside the cells as a biomarker point, which describes
dysfunctions in diseases and increases knowledge of how proteins are working.
All the methodologies involved in these descriptions are integrated in the field
called Proteomics
Apex Peptide Elution Chain Selection: A New Strategy for Selecting Precursors in 2D-LC-MALDI-TOF/TOF Experiments on Complex Biological Samples
LC-MALDI provides an often overlooked opportunity to exploit the separation between LC-MS and MS/MS stages of a 2D-LC-MS-based proteomics experiment, that is, by making a smarter selection for precursor fragmentation. Apex Peptide Elution Chain Selection (APECS) is a simple and powerful method for intensity-based peptide selection in a complex sample separated by 2D-LC, using a MALDI-TOF/TOF instrument. It removes the peptide redundancy present in the adjacent first-dimension (typically strong cation exchange, SCX) fractions by constructing peptide elution profiles that link the precursor ions of the same peptide across SCX fractions. Subsequently, the precursor ion most likely to fragment successfully in a given profile is selected for fragmentation analysis, selecting on precursor intensity and absence of adjacent ions that may cofragment. To make the method independent of experiment-specific tolerance criteria, we introduce the concept of the branching factor, which measures the likelihood of false clustering of precursor ions based on past experiments. By validation with a complex proteome sample of Arabidopsis thaliana, APECS identified an equivalent number of peptides as a conventional data-dependent acquisition method but with a 35% smaller work load. Consequently, reduced sample depletion allowed further selection of lower signal-to-noise ratio precursor ions, leading to a larger number of identified unique peptides.
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