| Literature DB >> 8100404 |
S Sheng1, J J Kraft, S M Schuster.
Abstract
When an aqueous L-asparagine solution was mixed with a dilute ethanolic ninhydrin solution and incubated at temperatures lower than 37 degrees C, the resulting mixture exhibited an ultraviolet (uv)-visible absorption spectrum with the maximum absorption at 340-350 nm. In contrast, the mixtures of several other amino acids with ninhydrin yielded Ruhemann purple (S. Ruhemann, 1910, J. Chem. Soc. 97, 1438-1449, 1910; S. Ruhemann, 1910, J. Chem. Soc. 97, 2025-2031) and the corresponding uv-visible spectra had absorption maxima at 405 and 570 nm. The effects of several factors including the reaction temperature, the ninhydrin concentration, and pH on the asparagine-ninhydrin reaction were investigated to optimize the specificity and sensitivity. As a result, a simple and specific colorimetric asparagine assay was developed. Using the assay protocol, the absorption of the asparagine-ninhydrin mixtures at 340 nm had a linear relationship with the asparagine concentration in the range of 50 microM to 50 mM, even in the presence of a high background of other amino acids. The application of this assay could be easily extended to more complex enzymatic reaction systems. When the enzyme activities of L-asparagine synthetases from different species and commercial L-asparaginase were measured with both the ninhydrin colorimetric procedure and the HPLC amino acid analysis, comparable results were obtained. While the chemistry of this novel asparagine-ninhydrin reaction is not fully understood, the colorimetric asparagine assay reported herein is of great practical value because it is specific, sensitive, simple, and extremely inexpensive.Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8100404 DOI: 10.1006/abio.1993.1264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Biochem ISSN: 0003-2697 Impact factor: 3.365