Literature DB >> 11721895

Detection of nonderivatized peptides in capillary electrophoresis using quenched phosphorescence.

J Kuijt1, R van Teylingen, T Nijbacker, F Ariese, U A Brinkman, C Gooijer.   

Abstract

A capillary electrophoresis detection technique for (small) peptides is presented, i.e. quenched phosphorescence, a method that is generally applicable and does not require chemical derivatization. For this purpose, a novel phosphorophore, 1-bromo-4-naphthalenesulfonic acid (BrNS), was synthesized. BrNS has sufficient water solubility and provides strong phosphorescence at room temperature over a wide pH range. The detection is based on the dynamic quenching of the BrNS phosphorescence background signal by electron transfer from the amino group of the peptides at pH 9.5-10. For the di- and tripeptides Val-Tyr-Val, Val-Gly-Gly, Ala-Ser, Gly-Asn, Gly-Ala, and Gly-Tyr, detection limits in the range of 5-20 microg/L were obtained. The novel technique is even a good alternative for the (limited) group of peptides containing tyrosine and, thus, exhibiting native fluorescence as well as strong UV absorption: using Gly-Tyr, Val-Tyr-Val, methionine enkephalin, and human angiotensin II as test compounds, quenched phosphorescence detection was found to compare favorably with absorption detection at 190- and 266-nm laser-induced fluorescence detection, as performed with a recently developed, small-size, quadrupled Nd:YAG laser.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11721895     DOI: 10.1021/ac0105282

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  1 in total

1.  Quenched phosphorescence as alternative detection mode in the chiral separation of methotrexate by electrokinetic chromatography.

Authors:  María Castro-Puyana; Ivonne Lammers; Joost Buijs; Cees Gooijer; Freek Ariese
Journal:  Anal Bioanal Chem       Date:  2011-04-18       Impact factor: 4.142

  1 in total

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