| Literature DB >> 35492213 |
Christian Kürzl1, Heidi Wohlschläger1, Simon Schiffer1, Ulrich Kulozik1.
Abstract
Detection and quantification of milk protein residues can be of utmost importance for validation of cleaning process efficiency in removing even traces of residues as well as quality assurance and product safety. However, currently available assays cannot provide a combination of high sensitivity and a simultaneous quantification of the individual milk proteins. Furthermore, a low protein-to-protein-variability and high compatibility with other reagents such as residual cleaning agents (e.g. surfactants) cannot be ensured. Therefore, a new method was developed comprised of a pre-concentration of proteins by solid-phase extraction and optimisation of the sensitivity of an existing reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography method for the separate quantification of bovine milk proteins κ-Casein, αS2-Casein, αS1-Casein, β-Casein, α-Lactalbumin, and β-Lactoglobulin. Hereby, solid-phase extraction enables robust and reproducible purification and concentration of protein residues with a high protein recovery rate and flexible adjustment of concentration factors. The increased sensitivity of the reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography method was achieved by changes in the measurement wavelength and guanidine buffer concentration. This new method enables reproducible concentration, purification and quantification of protein concentrations below 7 ng mL-1 and thus can be used to detect milk protein residues in highly diluted aqueous systems.•Concentration, purification and quantification of milk protein residues with a high recovery rate of proteins (> 94%) and high reproducibility (coefficient of variation (CV) < 3.0%)•Flexible adjustment of sample volumes allows the utilisation of high concentration factors (≤ 500) without compromising the recovery rate of proteins (recovery rate of proteins decreases by 2.74% per 100 CF).Entities:
Keywords: Beta-lactoglobulin; Casein; Cleaning validation; Low protein concentration; Product safety; Quality assurance; Quality control; Skim milk; Whey protein
Year: 2022 PMID: 35492213 PMCID: PMC9043403 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2022.101695
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Test for linearity of RP-HPLC method with pasteurised skim milk.
| Milk protein | Range of concentrations[µg mL−1] | Range of amounts | R2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| κ-CN | 9.6–1283.9 | 0.96–128.39 | 0.998 |
| αS2-CN | 8.8–1179.8 | 0.88–117.98 | 0.995 |
| αS1-CN | 27.5–3666.6 | 2.75–366.66 | 0.998 |
| β-CN | 27.0 –3597.2 | 2.70–359.72 | 0.997 |
| α-LA | 2.9–393.3 | 0.29–39.33 | 0.991 |
| β-LG B | 3.3–439.5 | 0.33–43.95 | 0.996 |
| β-LG A | 7.6–1017.9 | 0.76–101.79 | 0.997 |
applies for an injection volume of 100 µl.
R2, correlation coefficient: high values indicate linear correlation. probability for zero slope of line all < 0.001.
Fig. 1Protein recovery rates after SPE and RP-HPLC for the total protein as well as for the individual milk proteins (κ-CN, αS2-CN, αS1-CN, β-CN, α-LA, β-LG B and β-LG A) (n = 8).
Fig. 2Protein recovery of total milk proteins for varying residual concentrations of cleaning agents NaOH (A) and a combination of industrial cleaning agents Ultrasil 120 (upper x-axis) as an alkaline NaOH-based cleaning agent and Ultrasil 08 (lower x-axis) as a surfactant-based additive (B).
Influence of different dilution factors of skim milk (1:120, 1:900, 1:3000, 1:6000 and 1:9000; details see Method details section) on resulting sample volume, SPE volume, protein concentration, CF and sample processing time.
| Samplenumber | Sample volume[mL] | SPE volume | Protein concentration | CF | Sample processing time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 20 | 26.1 | 294.97 | 6.7 | 8.7 |
| 2 | 150 | 196.1 | 38.03 | 50.0 | 65.4 |
| 3 | 500 | 653.6 | 11.41 | 166.7 | 217.8 |
| 4 | 1000 | 1307.3 | 5.71 | 333.3 | 435.7 |
| 5 | 1500 | 1960.9 | 3.80 | 500.0 | 653.5 |
sample volume after addition of SPE ingredients.
total protein concentration in the sample after addition of SPE ingredients.
calculated based on the initial sample volume without SPE additives and the elution volume of 3.0 mL.
calculated with a flow rate of 3.0 mL min−1; only refers to the process time of the applied sample, no preceding or succeeding SPE steps included.
Fig. 3Protein recovery rate of the total protein for skim milk samples diluted 1:120, 1:900, 1:3000, 1:6000 and 1:9000 after concentration by SPE and quantification by RP-HPLC.
Fig. 4UV signal of a RP-HPLC analysis with a 1:5 sample dilution in GdnHCl-buffer and a detection wavelength of 220 nm as postulated by Dumpler et al. [10] (black); a 1:2 sample dilution in GdnHCl-buffer and a detection wavelength of 220 nm (red); a 1:2 sample dilution in GdnHCl buffer and a detection wavelength of 214 nm (blue).
Fig. 5Detected amount (with RP-HPLC) of whey proteins (green triangles) and caseins (blue squares) as a function of the storage time at RT relative to the initial protein amount detected after 30 min incubation with GdnHCl buffer. The grey line highlights the reference point of 100% detected protein.
Fig. 6Detected protein concentration (with RP-HPLC) as a function of the applied protein concentration (0.09 mg mL−1–11.57 mg mL−1). The applied concentration was calculated according to Eq. (6).
| Subject Area: | Chemistry |
| More specific subject area: | Protein analysis |
| Method name: | Concentration, purification and quantification of milk protein residues following cleaning processes using SPE and RP-HPLC |
| Name and reference of original method: | G. Bobe, D.C. Beitz, A.E. Freeman, G.L. Lindberg |
| Resource availability: | SPE cartridges: Phenomenex Strata C18-T cartridges, 55 µm, 140 Å (Phenomenex LTD, Aschaffenburg, Germany) Vacuum chamber: Supelco Visiprep 12-port (Sigma-Aldrich Chemie GmbH, Taufkirchen, Germany) RP-HPLC system Agilent 1200 series chromatograph (Agilent Technologies, Waldbronn, Germany) C18 analytical silica-based column: Maisch ReproSil-Pur 300 ODS-3, 4.6 × 150 mm, 5 µm (Dr. A. Maisch HPLC GmbH, Ammerbuch-Entringen, Germany) Analytical guard cartridge: Agilent Zorbax 300SB-C18, 4.6 × 12.5 mm, 5 µm (Agilent Technologies, Waldbronn, Germany) Agilent ChemStation software (Rev.C.01.08) Pasteurised (74 °C, 28 s) skim milk (purchased from the local dairy Molkerei Weihenstephan, Freising, Germany) Analytical protein standards for κ-CN, α-CN, β-CN, α-LA, β-LG B, β-LG A (Sigma-Aldrich Chemie GmbH, Taufkirchen, Germany) Guanidine buffer (modified from Bobe et al. Guanidine hydrochloride (GdnHCl) Trisodium citrate Dithiothreitol (DTT) BisTris buffer Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) Acetonitrile (ACN) (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) Ultrapure water (from MilliQ Integral 3, Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) Ca(OH)2 (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) NaOH (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) HCl (Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) Ultrasil 08 (Ecolab Europe GmbH, Wallisellen, Switzerland) Ultrasil 120 (Ecolab Europe GmbH, Wallisellen, Switzerland) |