320 research outputs found
A dual fluorophore system for simultaneous bioassays
A detection scheme for the simultaneous evaluation of two bioassays based on fluorescence spectroscopy is presented. For the determination of hydrogen peroxide-generating enzymes or peroxidases, the non-fluorescent 4-(N-methylhydrazino)-7-nitro-2,1,3-benzooxadiazole (MNBDH) is converted to the strongly fluorescent 4-(N-methylamino)-7-nitro-2,1,3-benzooxadiazole (MNBDA). Phosphatases are detected based on the cleavage of the non-fluorescent 5-fluorosalicyl phosphate (5-FSAP) under formation of the fluorescent 5-fluorosalicylic acid (5-FSA). While excitation of the fluorophores may be carried out at the same wavelength, their emission spectra differ significantly. This allows the read-out of both assays using commercially available microplate readers without additional chemometric tools. Compared with individual assays, limits of detection are similar, and linearity of the calibration functions for both enzymes is observed over 2–3 concentration decades starting at the limit of quantification. The simultaneous determination of glucose oxidase and acid phosphatase in honey is presented as example for the application of the detection scheme
Fluorescence and Mass Spectrometric Detection Schemes for Simultaneous Enzymatic Conversions: Method Development and Comparison
Fluorescence and mass spectrometric detection schemes are developed and compared for the simultaneous activity determination of two enzymes in solution. As model system, the following reactions are used: The alkaline phosphatase catalyzed reaction with 5-fluorosalicyl phosphate yields the fluorescent 5-fluorosalicylic acid, whereas microperoxidase 11 reacts with 4-(N-methylhydrazino)-7-nitro-2,1,3-benzooxadiazole and H2O2 to the strongly fluorescent 4-(N-methylamino)-7-nitro-2,1,3-benzooxadiazole. As the emission spectra of the fluorescent products as well as the molecular masses of substrates and products do not interfere with each other, is it possible to determine both reactions in parallel with both detection schemes. The measurements resulted in the same limits of detection, limits of quantification and linear ranges of the single/simultaneous enzyme determination for fluorescence and MS detection. While the relative standard deviations were significantly lower in case of fluorescence detection (1.4–3.2%) than in mass spectrometry (5.7–10.1%), the latter proved to be the more versatile approach for multianalyte determination
Analysis of cysteine-containing proteins using precolumn derivatization with N-(2-ferroceneethyl)maleimide and liquid chromatography/electrochemistry/mass spectrometry
N-(2-Ferroceneethyl)maleimide (FEM) is introduced as an electroactive derivatizing agent for thiol functionalities in proteins. Using appropriate reaction conditions, the derivatization is completed within five minutes and no unspecific labeling of free amino functions is observed. Liquid chromatography/electrochemistry/mass spectrometry was used to detect the reaction products. The reagent is a useful tool for determining the number of free thiol groups or the total number of free and disulfide-bound thiol groups in proteins. The electrochemical cell provides additional information, because the increase in mass spectrometric response upon electrochemical oxidation of the neutral ferrocene to the charged ferrocinium groups is monitored. The method was successfully applied to the analysis of native proteins and their tryptic digests
Kinetic study of an on-chip isocyanate derivatization reaction by on-line nano-esi ms
A high-throughput method is presented for the study of reaction kinetics by nano- electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (nano-ESI MS). The reaction of propyl isocyanate (2), benzyl isocyanate (3), and toluene-2,4-diisocyanate (4) with 4-nitro-7- piperazino-2,1,3-benzoxadiazole (NBDPZ) (1) to yield the corresponding urea derivatives (5) was carried out in a continuous flow glass microchip. Real-time monitoring of the reactions was done by nano-ESI MS. Rate constants of 1.6 ␣ 104 M-1 min-1, 5.2 ␣ 104 M-1 min-1, and 2.5 ␣ 104 M-1 min-1 were determined for isocyanate 2, 3 and 4, respectively
From Fundamentals to Applications: Recent Developments in Atmospheric Pressure Photoionization Mass Spectrometry
Only five years after the first publication on atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI), this technique has evolved rapidly as a very useful complement to established ionization techniques for liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS). This is reflected in a rapidly increasing number of publications in this field. On the one hand, thorough studies into the photoionization mechanism have provided deep insights into the roles and influences of the solvent, the dopant and other additives. On the other hand, a large number of new and attractive applications have recently been introduced. New instrumental developments have resulted in combined APPI/ESI (PAESI) and APPI/APCI sources and a microfabricated APPI source. In this review, the most important developments within the field are summarized, focusing in particular on the applications of the technique
LA-ICP-MS/MS improves limits of detection in elemental bioimaging of gadolinium deposition originating from MRI contrast agents in skin and brain tissues
© 2018 Elsevier GmbH A novel analytical method to detect the retention of gadolinium from contrast agents for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in tissue samples of patients is presented. It is based on laser ablation - inductively coupled plasma - triple quadrupole - mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS/MS). Both Gd and P were monitored with a mass shift of +16, corresponding to mono-oxygenated species, as well as Zn, Ca, and Fe on-mass. This method resulted in a significantly reduced background and improved limits of detection not only for phosphorus, but also for gadolinium. These improvements were essential to perform elemental bioimaging with improved resolution of 5 μm x 5 μm, allowing the detection of small Gd deposits in fibrotic skin and brain tumour tissue with diameters of approximately 50 μm. Detailed analyses of these regions revealed that most Gd was accompanied with P and Ca, indicating co-precipitation
Electrochemistry-on-chip for on-line conversions in drug metabolism studies
We have designed an integrated 3-electrode electrochemical cell on-chip with high analyte conversion rates for use in drug metabolism studies. The electrochemical cell contains platinum working and counter electrodes and an iridium oxide pseudo-reference electrode. The pseudo-reference electrode has a pH sensitivity of −52 mV/s, and thus will provide a constant potential in solutions with known and constant pH. The average drift of the iridium oxide electrode is below 5 mV for a typical 15 min conversion experiment. We have been able to mimic the oxidative drug metabolism reactions catalysed by enzymes of the cytochrome P-450 family, normally occurring in the human body. With the chip, the different reaction products of both rat liver cell microsome and human liver cell microsome incubations have been observe
Toxicological Characterization of the Inorganic and Organic Arsenic Metabolite Thio-DMAV in Cultured Human Lung Cells
We synthesised and toxicologically characterised the arsenic metabolite thiodimethylarsinic acid (thio-DMAV). Successful synthesis of highly pure thio-DMAV was confirmed by state-of-the-art analytical techniques including 1H-NMR, HPLC-FTMS, and HPLC-ICPMS. Toxicological characterization was carried out in comparison to arsenite and its well-known trivalent and pentavalent methylated metabolites. It comprised cellular bioavailability as well as different cytotoxicity and genotoxicity end points in cultured human A549 lung cells. Of all arsenicals investigated, thio-DMAV exerted the strongest cytotoxicity. Moreover, thio-DMAV did not induce DNA strand breaks and an increased induction of both micronuclei and multinucleated cells occurred only at beginning cytotoxic concentrations, indicating that thio-DMAV does not act via a genotoxic mode of action. Finally, to assess potential implications of thio-DMAV for human health, further mechanistic studies are urgently necessary to identify the toxic mode of action of this highly toxic, unusual pentavalent organic arsenical.
Gold nanoparticle distribution in advanced in vitro and ex vivo human placental barrier models
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are promising candidates to design the next generation NP-based drug formulations specifically treating maternal, fetal or placental complications with reduced side effects. Profound knowledge on AuNP distribution and effects at the human placental barrier in dependence on the particle properties and surface modifications, however, is currently lacking. Moreover, the predictive value of human placental transfer models for NP translocation studies is not yet clearly understood, in particular with regards to differences between static and dynamic exposures. To understand if small (3–4 nm) AuNPs with different surface modifications (PEGylated versus carboxylated) are taken up and cross the human placental barrier, we performed translocation studies in a static human in vitro co-culture placenta model and the dynamic human ex vivo placental perfusion model. The samples were analysed using ICP-MS, laser ablation-ICP-MS and TEM analysis for sensitive, label-free detection of AuNPs
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