| Literature DB >> 35806433 |
Luisa-Gabriela Bogos1,2, Ioana-Ecaterina Pralea1, Radu-Cristian Moldovan1, Cristina-Adela Iuga1,2.
Abstract
Chiral metabolomics is starting to become a well-defined research field, powered by the recent advances in separation techniques. This review aimed to cover the most relevant advances in indirect enantioseparations of endogenous metabolites that were published over the last 10 years, including improvements and development of new chiral derivatizing agents, along with advances in separation methodologies. Moreover, special emphasis is put on exciting advances in separation techniques combined with mass spectrometry, such as chiral discrimination by ion-mobility mass spectrometry together with untargeted strategies for profiling of chiral metabolites in complex matrices. These advances signify a leap in chiral metabolomics technologies that will surely offer a solid base to better understand the specific roles of enantiomeric metabolites in systems biology.Entities:
Keywords: chiral derivatization agents; chiral metabolomics; endogenous metabolites; indirect chiral analysis; ion-mobility mass spectrometry; mass spectrometry metabolomics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35806433 PMCID: PMC9267260 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23137428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Chemical structures of reported CDAs grouped according to the detection method for which they were developed. CDAs presented as racemates can be used in both enantiomeric forms.
Derivatization characteristics of most commonly reported CDAs.
| CDA | Name | Derivatization Moiety | Derivatization Conditions | Commercially Available | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-FDAA | 1-Fluoro-2,4-dinitrophenyl-5-L-alanineamide | Amines | ▪ Alkaline pH (TEA, NaHCO3), 24 h incubation for yield > 95% | Yes | [ |
| α-Hydroxy acids | ▪ In presence of NaH (60% dispersed in oil); Sample in THF | ||||
| OPA | Primary amines | ▪ Alkaline pH (sodium tetraborate, NaOH) | Yes | [ | |
| (+) or (−)-FLEC | (+) or (−)-1-(9-Fluorenyl)ethyl chloroformate | Primary and secondary amines | ▪ Alkaline pH (sodium tetraborate) | Yes | [ |
| Thiols | |||||
| ( | N-(4-nitrophenoxycarbonyl)-L-phenylalanine 2-methoxyethyl ester | Primary and secondary amines | ▪ Alkaline pH (sodium tetraborate, TEA) | Yes | [ |
| Thiols | |||||
| Phenols | |||||
| ( | (( | Primary and secondary amines | ▪ In presence of TEA or DMAP, CDA dissolved in ACN | Yes | [ |
| Carboxylic acids | ▪ In aprotic media, using condensation agents | ||||
| NBD-( | ( | Primary and secondary amines | ▪ In presence of TEA or DMAP, CDA dissolved in ACN | No | [ |
| Carboxylic acids | ▪ In aprotic media, using condensation agents | ||||
| (+)- or (−)-DATAN | (+) or (−)-Diacetyl-L-tartaric anhydride | Amines | ▪ Reacts in aprotic media (CH2Cl2:acetic acid–4:1) | Yes | [ |
| Hydroxyls | |||||
| DMT-3( | ( | Carboxylic acids | ▪ In presence of activation reagents (TPP and DPDS) | No | [ |
| DMT-1( | ( | Carboxylic acids | ▪ In presence of activation reagents (TPP and DPDS) | No | [ |
| DMT-( | (( | Amines | ▪ CDA in ACN, in presence of TEA | No | [ |
| ( | Thiols | ▪ In presence of TEA | No | [ | |
| ( | (3-[(Benzoyloxy)carbonyl]-5-oxo-1,3-oxazolidin-4-yl)acetate | Amines | ▪ In PBS (100 mM) prepared in ACN | No | [ |
| L-PGA | L-Pyroglutamic acid | Primary and secondary amines | ▪ In presence of activators (EDC/HOBt) | Yes | [ |
| L-PGA-OSu | L-Pyroglutamic acid succinidimyl ester | Amines | ▪ CDA in ACN with TEA; sample in ACN | Yes | [ |
| ( | ( | Amines | ▪ In borate buffer (pH 8.8) diluted with ACN | No | [ |
| N-[1-oxo-5-(triphenylphosphonium)pentyl]-( | Amines | ▪ In ACN containing borate buffer | No | [ | |
| D-BPBr | 1-Benzoyl-pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid 5-bromo-2-formyl-phenyl ester | Primary amines | ▪ In H2O/ACN solution containing 0.05M PBS | No | [ |
| L- and D-BPCl, | 1-Benzoyl-pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid 5-chloro-2-formyl-phenyl ester | Amines | ▪ In H2O/ACN solution containing 0.05 M PBS | No | [ |
| ( | ( | Amines | ▪ In aqueous solution mixed with acetone. | No | [ |
| L-TSPC | N-(p-toluenesulfonyl)-L-phenylalanine chloride | Amines | ▪ In presence of TEA or Py | Yes | [ |
| Hydroxyl | ▪ Selective derivatization of hydroxy in anhydrous ACN with Py; 25 °C, 10 min | ||||
| ( | ( | Carboxylic acids | ▪ In presence of activation reagents (TPP and DPDS) | Yes | [ |
| ( | ( | Amines | ▪ CDA in ACN; sample in NaHCO3 | No | [ |
| ( | Benzyl-isothiocyanate | Amines | ▪ Sample in NaHCO3 | Yes | [ |
| ( | Naphtyl-isothiocyanate | Amines | ▪ Sample in NaHCO3; microwave derivatization (60 s, 600 W) | Yes | [ |
| ( | ( | Carboxylic acids | ▪ In presence of condensation agents (DMT-MM) | Yes | [ |
Abbreviations: ACN, acetonitrile; CDA, chiral derivatization agent; DMAP, 4-N,N-dimethylaminopyridine; DMT-MM, 4-(4,6-dimethoxy-1,3,5-triazin-2-yl)-4-methylmorpholinum chloride; DPDS, 2,2′-dipyridyl disulfide; EDC, 1-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-3-ethylcarbodiimide; HOBt, 1-hydroxy-1H-benzotriazole; PBS, phosphate-buffered saline; Py, pyridine; TEA, triethylamine; THF, tetrahydrofuran; TPP, triphenylphosphine.
Figure 2Base peak chromatogram showing baseline resolution of D- and L-enantiomeric forms of AAs and HAs using BEH C18 column. Reprinted with permission from Pandey et al. [91]. Copyright 2021, American Chemical Association.
Figure 3Peak separation of (R)-BiAC-tagged d- and l-amino acids under optimum separation conditions. Reprinted from Harada et al. [61], Copyright 2019, with permission from Elsevier.