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1.
The incorporation of stable isotopes improves the assessment of glucose metabolism and, with some researchers using two tracers, (2)H-glucose assessed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and (13)C-glucose by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS), a common derivative for both is advantageous. The most commonly used derivatives for GC/MS are inappropriate for GC/C/IRMS as additional functional groups dilute the label. We therefore considered the suitability of six derivatives for both GC/MS and GC/C/IRMS. Glucose alkylboronates were prepared by adding the appropriate alkylboronic acid (butyl- or methylboronic acid) in pyridine to desiccated glucose. The derivatisation was completed by reacting this with either (a) acetic anhydride or trifluoroacetic anhydride (acetate derivatives) or (b) bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide BSTFA (TMS derivatives). All six derivatives were assessed using GC/MS and (13)C GC/C/IRMS.Neither TMS derivative exhibited any signal intensity in the molecular ion, although a M-15 ion showed good agreement between experimental and theoretical data and, whilst still low in intensity, could be suitable for isotope work. Similarly, none of the acetate derivatives showed any intensity at the molecular ion although three key fragmentation series were identified. The most attractive sequence, initiated by the loss of 1,2 cyclic boronate, resulted in the main fragment ion of interest, m/z 240, corresponding to the fluorinated methylboronate derivate. Minimal carbon and hydrogen atoms are added to this derivative making it an excellent choice for stable isotope work, while proving suitable for analysis by both GC/MS and GC/C/IRMS.  相似文献   

2.
In the present study, different MS methods for the determination of human muscle protein fractional synthesis rate (FSR) using [ring‐13C6]phenylalanine as a tracer were evaluated. Because the turnover rate of human skeletal muscle is slow, only minute quantities of the stable isotopically labeled amino acid will be incorporated within the few hours of a typical laboratory experiment. GC combustion isotope ratio MS (GC‐C‐IRMS) has thus far been considered the ‘gold’ standard for the precise measurements of these low enrichment levels. However, advances in liquid chromatography‐tandem MS (LC‐MS/MS) and GC‐tandem MS (GC‐MS/MS) have made these techniques an option for human muscle FSR measurements. Human muscle biopsies were freeze dried, cleaned, and hydrolyzed, and the amino acids derivatized using either N‐acetyl‐n‐propyl, phenylisothiocyanate, or N‐methyl‐N‐(tert‐butyldimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (MTBSTFA) for GC‐C‐IRMS, LC‐MS/MS, and GC‐MS/MS analysis, respectively. A second derivative, heptafluorobutyric acid (HFBA), was also used for GC‐MS/MS analysis as an alternative for MTBSTFA. The machine reproducibility or the coefficients of variation for delta tracer‐tracee‐ratio measurements (delta tracer‐tracee‐ratio values around 0.0002) were 2.6%, 4.1%, and 10.9% for GC‐C‐IRMS, LC‐MS/MS, and GC‐MS/MS (MTBSTFA), respectively. FSR determined with LC‐MS/MS compared well with GC‐C‐IRMS and so did the GC‐MS/MS when using the HFBA derivative (linear fit Y = 1.08 ± 0.10, X + 0.0049 ± 0.0061, r = 0.89 ± 0.01, P < 0.0001). In conclusion, (1) IRMS still offers the most precise measurement of human muscle FSR, (2) LC‐MS/MS comes quite close and is a good alternative when tissue quantities are too small for GC‐C‐IRMS, and (3) If GC‐MS/MS is to be used, then the HFBA derivative should be used instead of MTBSTFA, which gave unacceptably high variability. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
The use of stable isotope labelled glucose provides insight into glucose metabolism. The 13C‐isotopic enrichment of glucose is usually measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) or gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS). However, in both techniques the samples must be derivatized prior to analysis, which makes sample preparation more labour‐intensive and increases the uncertainty of the measured isotopic composition. A novel method for the determination of isotopic enrichment of glucose in human plasma using liquid chromatography/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LC/IRMS) has been developed. Using this technique, for which hardly any sample preparation is needed, we showed that both the enrichment and the concentration could be measured with very high precision using only 20 µL of plasma. In addition, a comparison with GC/MS and GC/IRMS showed that the best performance was achieved with the LC/IRMS method making it the method of choice for the measurement of 13C‐isotopic enrichment in plasma samples. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
Galactosemia is a potentially fatal disease resulting from a deficiency of galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase. In order to perform mechanistic studies designed to elucidate further the etiology of the disease, we required a method to monitor (13)C enrichment in plasma galactose following a single oral dose or intravenous infusion of [1-(13)C]galactose. Determinations of plasma [(13)C]galactose enrichment requires methodology with extremely high specificity because of potential interference from other low molecular mass plasma constituents and from glucose, an isomer which is present in much higher concentrations. We have developed a method based on gas chromatography/positive chemical ionization tandem mass spectrometry (GC/PCI-MS/MS) for the precise and accurate determination of plasma [(13)C]galactose enrichment. The method employed a pentaacetylaldononitrile derivative of galactose in order to improve its GC and MS characteristics. Peak areas resulting from the transitions m/z 328 --> 106 and m/z 329 --> 107 were used to quantify the relative abundance of labeled and unlabeled galactose. Validation of the method was performed by determination of the precision and accuracy over a wide range of galactose concentrations and (13)C enrichments. The GC/PCI-MS/MS method was able to determine accurately enrichments at galactose concentrations down to 0.8 microM in the presence of 4 mM glucose, making it both highly selective and the most sensitive method currently available.  相似文献   

5.
We report a method for determining plasma und urinary [(15)N]urea enrichments in an abundance range between 0.37 and 0.52 (15)N atom% (0-0.15 atom% excess (APE) (15)N) using a dimethylaminomethylene derivative. Compared with conventional off-line preparation and (15)N analysis of urea, this method requires only small sample volumes (0.5 ml of plasma and 25 microl of urine). The (15)N/(14)N ratio of urea derivatives was measured by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS). Two peaks were separated; one was identified by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) as the complete derivatized urea. Calibration of the complete urea derivative was performed by linear regression of enrichment values of known standard mixtures. Replicate standard (6-465 per thousand delta(15)N) derivatizations showed a relative standard deviation ranging from 0.1 to 7%. In order to test the feasibility of the method, human subjects and rats ingested a single meal containing either 200 mg of [(15)N]glycine (95 AP (15)N) or 0.4 mg of [(15)N]-alpha-lysine (95 AP (15)N), respectively. Urine and plasma were collected at hourly intervals over 7 h after the meal intake. After (15)N glycine intake, maximum urinary urea (15)N enrichments were 330 and 430 per thousand delta(15)N (0.12 and 0.16 APE (15)N) measured by GC/C/IRMS, whereas plasma [(15)N]glycine enrichments were 2.5 and 3.3 APE (15)N in the two human subjects 2 h after the meal. (15)N enrichments of total urine and urine samples devoid of ammonia were higher enriched than urinary [(15)N]urea measured by GC/C/IRMS, reflecting the presence of other urinary N-containing substances (e.g. creatinine). In rats plasma urea (15)N enrichments were 15-20 times higher than those in urinary urea (10-20 per thousand delta(15)N). The different [(15)N]urea enrichments observed after ingestion of [(15)N]-labeled glycine and lysine confirm known differences in the metabolism of these amino acids.  相似文献   

6.
Gas chromatography‐combustion‐isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS) is increasingly applied to food and metabolic studies for stable isotope analysis (δ13C), with the quantification of analyte concentration often obtained via a second alternative method. We describe a rapid direct transesterification of triacylglycerides (TAGs) for fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis by GC‐C‐IRMS demonstrating robust simultaneous quantification of amount of analyte (mean r2 = 0.99, accuracy ±2% for 37 FAMEs) and δ13C (±0.13‰) in a single analytical run. The maximum FAME yield and optimal δ13C values are obtained by derivatizing with 10% (v/v) acetyl chloride in methanol for 1 h, while lower levels of acetyl chloride and shorter reaction times skewed the δ13C values by as much as 0.80‰. A Bland‐Altman evaluation of the GC‐C‐IRMS measurements resulted in excellent agreement for pure oils (±0.08‰) and oils extracted from French fries (±0.49‰), demonstrating reliable simultaneous quantification of FAME concentration and δ13C values. Thus, we conclude that for studies requiring both the quantification of analyte and δ13C data, such as authentication or metabolic flux studies, GC‐C‐IRMS can be used as the sole analytical method. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
The confirmation by GC/C/IRMS of the exogenous origin of pseudo-endogenous steroids from human urine samples requires extracts of adequate purity. A strategy based on HPLC sample purification prior to the GC/C/IRMS analysis of human urinary endogenous androgens (i.e. testosterone, androsterone and/or androstenediols), is presented. A method without any additional derivatization step is proposed, allowing to simplify the urine pretreatment procedure, leading to extracts free of interferences permitting precise and accurate IRMS analysis, without the need of correcting the measured delta values for the contribution of the derivatizing agent. The HPLC extracts were adequately combined to both reduce the number of GC/C/IRMS runs and to have appropriate endogenous reference compounds (ERC; i.e. pregnanediol, 11-keto-etiocholanolone) on each GC–IRMS run. The purity of the extracts was assessed by their parallel analysis by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry, with GC conditions identical to those of the GC/C/IRMS assay. The method has been validated according to ISO17025 requirements (within assay precision below 0.3 ‰ 13C delta units and between assay precision below 0.6 ‰ 13C delta units for most of the compounds investigated) fulfilling the World Anti-Doping Agency requirements.  相似文献   

8.
Amino sugars in soils have been used as markers of microbial necromass and to determine the relative contribution of bacterial and fungal residues to soil organic matter. However, little is known about the dynamics of amino sugars in soil. This is partly because of a lack of adequate techniques to determine ‘turnover rates’ of amino sugars in soil. We conducted an incubation experiment where 13C‐labeled organic substrates of different quality were added to a sandy soil. The objectives were to evaluate the applicability of compound‐specific stable isotope analysis via gas chromatography‐combustion‐isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS) for the determination of 13C amino sugars and to demonstrate amino sugar dynamics in soil. We found total analytical errors between 0.8 and 2.6‰ for the δ13C‐values of the soil amino sugars as a result of the required δ13C‐corrections for isotopic alterations due to derivatization, isotopic fractionation and analytical conditions. Furthermore, the δ13C‐values of internal standards in samples determined via GC‐C‐IRMS deviated considerably from the δ13C‐values of the pure compounds determined via elemental analyzer IRMS (with a variation of 9 to 10‰ between the first and third quartile among all samples). This questions the applicability of GC‐C‐IRMS for soil amino sugar analysis. Liquid chromatography‐combustion‐IRMS (LC‐C‐IRMS) might be a promising alternative since derivatization, one of the main sources of error when using GC‐C‐IRMS, is eliminated from the procedure. The high 13C‐enrichment of the substrate allowed for the detection of very high 13C‐labels in soil amino sugars after 1 week of incubation, while no significant differences in amino sugar concentrations over time and across treatments were observed. This suggests steady‐state conditions upon substrate addition, i.e. amino sugar formation equalled amino sugar decomposition. Furthermore, higher quality substrates seemed to favor the production of fungal‐derived amino sugars. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
We compare a new simplified 2H enrichment mass isotopomer analysis (MIA) against the laborious hexamethylentetramine (HMT) method to quantify the contribution of gluconeogenesis (GNG) to total glucose production (GP) in calves. Both methods are based on the 2H labeling of glucose after in vivo administration of deuterium oxide. The 2H enrichments of plasma glucose at different C‐H positions were measured as aldonitrile pentaacetate (AAc) and methyloxime‐trimethylsilyl (MoxTMS) derivatives or HMT by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). Two pre‐ruminating fasted Holstein calves (51 kg body mass, BM, age 7 days) received two oral bolus doses of 2H2O (10 g/kg BM, 70 atom% 2H) at 7:00 h and 11:00 h after overnight food withdrawal. Blood samples for fractional GNG determination were collected at ?24 and between 6 and 9 h after the first 2H2O dose. The ratio of 2H enrichments C5/C2 represents the contribution of GNG to GP. The 2H enrichment at C2 was calculated based on the ion fragments at m/z 328 (C1‐C6) ‐ m/z 187 (C3‐C6) of glucose AAc. The 2H enrichment at C5 was approximated either by averaging the 2H enrichment at C5‐C6 using the ion fragment of glucose MoxTMS at m/z 205 or by conversion of the C5 of glucose into HMT. The fractional GNG calculated by the C5‐C6 average 2H enrichment method (41.4 ± 6.9%) compared to the HMT method (34.3 ± 11.4%) was not different (mean ± SD, n = 6 replicates). In conclusion, GNG can be estimated with less laborious sample preparation by means of our new C5‐C6 average 2H enrichment method using AAc and MoxTMS glucose derivatives. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
The effects of the gas chromatography flow rate on the determination of the deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) ratios of natural gas utilising gas chromatography/high-temperature conversion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/TC/IRMS) have been evaluated. In general, the measured deltaD values of methane, ethane and propane decrease with increase in column flow rate. When the column flow rate is 1 mL/min or higher, which is commonly used for the determination of D/H ratios of natural gas, the organic H in gas compounds may not be completely converted into hydrogen gas. Based on the results of experiments conducted on a GC column with an i.d. of 0.32 mm, a GC flow rate of 0.6 mL/min is proposed for determining the D/H ratios of natural gas by GC/TC/IRMS. Although this value may be dependent on the instrument conditions used in this work, we believe that correct deltaD values of organic compounds with a few carbon atoms are obtained only when relatively low GC flow rates are used for D/H analysis by GC/TC/IRMS. Moreover, as the presence of trace water could significantly affect the determination of D/H ratios, a newly designed inlet liner was used to remove trace water contained in some gas samples.  相似文献   

11.
Compound‐specific isotope analysis (CSIA) by liquid chromatography coupled to isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LC/IRMS) has until now been based on ion‐exchange separation. In this work, high‐temperature reversed‐phase liquid chromatography was coupled to, and for the first time carefully evaluated for, isotope ratio mass spectrometry (HT‐LC/IRMS) with four different stationary phases. Under isothermal and temperature gradient conditions, the column bleed of XBridge C18 (up to 180 °C), Acquity C18 (up to 200 °C), Triart C18 (up to 150 °C), and Zirchrom PBD (up to 150 °C) had no influence on the precision and accuracy of δ13C measurements, demonstrating the suitability of these columns for HT‐LC/IRMS analysis. Increasing the temperature during the LC/IRMS analysis of caffeine on two C18 columns was observed to result in shortened analysis time. The detection limit of HT‐RPLC/IRMS obtained for caffeine was 30 mg L–1 (corresponding to 12.4 nmol carbon on‐column). Temperature‐programmed LC/IRMS (i) accomplished complete separation of a mixture of caffeine derivatives and a mixture of phenols and (ii) did not affect the precision and accuracy of δ13C measurements compared with flow injection analysis without a column. With temperature‐programmed LC/IRMS, some compounds that coelute at room temperature could be baseline resolved and analyzed for their individual δ13C values, leading to an important extension of the application range of CSIA. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
Important aspects of glucose metabolism can be quantified by using the minimal model of glucose kinetics to interpret the results of intravenous glucose tolerance tests. The power of this methodology can be greatly increased by the addition of stable isotopically labelled tracer to the glucose bolus dose. This allows the separation of glucose disposal from endogenous glucose production and also increases the precision of the estimates of the physiological parameters measured. Until now the tracer of choice has been deuteriated glucose and the analytical technique has been gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). The consequence of this choice is that nearly 2 g of labelled material are needed and this makes the test expensive. We have investigated the use of (13)C-labelled glucose as the tracer in combination with gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) as the analytical technique. This methodology offers superior analytical precision when compared with the conventional method and so the amount of tracer used, and hence the cost, can be reduced considerably. Healthy non-obese male volunteers were recruited for a standard intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) protocol but 6,6-(2)H-glucose and 1-(13)C-glucose were administered simultaneously. Tracer/tracee ratios were derived from isotope ratio measurements of plasma glucose using both GC/MS and GC/C/IRMS. The results of these determinations indicated that the two tracers behaved identically under the test protocol. The combination of these results with plasma glucose and insulin concentration data allowed determination of the minimal model parameters S*g and S*i. The parameter relating to insulin-assisted glucose disposal, S*i, was found to be the same in the two techniques, but this was not the case for the non-insulin-dependent parameter S*g.  相似文献   

13.
The stable carbon isotope compositions of tetrols, erythritol and threitol were determined by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS). Using four tetrols with various δ13C values derivatized by methylboronic acid, the carbon isotope analysis method achieved excellent reproducibility and high accuracy. There was no carbon isotopic fractionation during the derivatization processes. The differences in the carbon isotopic compositions of methylboronates between the measured and calculated ranged from ?0.20 to 0.12‰, within the specification of the GC/C/IRMS system. It was demonstrated that δ13C values of tetrols could be calculated by a simple mass balance equation between tetrols, methylboronic acid, and methylboronates. The analogous 2‐methyltetrols, marker compounds of photooxidation products of atmospheric isoprene, should have similar behavior using the same derivatization reagent. This method may provide insight on sources and sinks of atmospheric isoprene. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
The utilisation of carbohydrate sources under exercise conditions is of considerable importance in performance sports. Incorporation of optimal profiles of macronutrients can improve endurance performance in athletes. However, gaining an understanding of the metabolic partitioning under sustained exercise can be problematical and isotope labelling approaches can help quantify substrate utilisation. The utilisation of oral galactose was investigated using 13C‐galactose and measurement of plasma galactose and glucose enrichment by liquid chromatography/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LC/IRMS). As little as 100 μL plasma could readily be analysed with only minimal sample processing. Fucose was used as a chemical and isotopic internal standard for the quantitation of plasma galactose and glucose concentrations, and isotopic enrichment. The close elution of galactose and glucose required a correction routine to be implemented to allow the measurement, and correction, of plasma glucose δ13C, even in the presence of very highly enriched galactose. A Bland‐Altman plot of glucose concentration measured by LC/IRMS against glucose measured by an enzymatic method showed good agreement between the methods. Data from seven trained cyclists, undergoing galactose supplementation before exercise, demonstrate that galactose is converted into glucose and is available for subsequent energy metabolism. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
Gaseous membrane permeation (MP) technologies have been combined with continuous‐flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry for on‐line δ13C measurements. The experimental setup of membrane permeation‐gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (MP‐GC/C/IRMS) quantitatively traps gas streams in membrane permeation experiments under steady‐state conditions and performs on‐line gas transfer into a GC/C/IRMS system. A commercial polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) membrane sheet was used for the experiments. Laboratory tests using CO2 demonstrate that the whole process does not fractionate the C isotopes of CO2. Moreover, the δ13C values of CO2 permeated on‐line give the same isotopic results as off‐line static dual‐inlet IRMS δ13C measurements. Formaldehyde generated from aqueous formaldehyde solutions has also been used as the feed gas for permeation experiments and on‐line δ13C determination. The feed‐formaldehyde δ13C value was pre‐determined by sampling the headspace of the thermostated aqueous formaldehyde solution. Comparison of the results obtained by headspace with those from direct aqueous formaldehyde injection confirms that the headspace sampling does not generate isotopic fractionation, but the permeated formaldehyde analyzed on‐line yields a 13C enrichment relative to the feed δ13C value, the isotopic fractionation being 1.0026 ± 0.0003. The δ13C values have been normalized using an adapted two‐point isotopic calibration for δ13C values ranging from ?42 to ?10‰. The MP‐GC/C/IRMS system allows the δ13C determination of formaldehyde without chemical derivatization or additional analytical imprecision. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
Carbohydrate is an important pool in the terrestrial carbon cycle. The potential offered by natural and artificial 13C-labelling techniques should therefore be applied to the investigation of the dynamics of individual sugars in soils. For this reason, we evaluated the method of 13C sugar analysis by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) after hydrolysis and direct trimethylsilylation. Trimethylsilylation involved the addition of several carbon atoms per sugar. These atoms have to be taken into account in the estimation of the carbon isotope ratio. The analysis of standard and natural pentoses and hexoses of known 13C enrichments revealed that the number of analysed added carbon atoms was less than expected from stoichiometry. This was attributed to incomplete derivatization and/or incomplete oxidation of methylsilyl carbon before IRMS. Using a calibration of the number of analysed added carbon atoms, the isotope excess of enriched samples could be determined with a relative error close to 5%. Concerning the determination of natural abundances by GC/C/IRMS, we could measure the delta 13C of standard C3- and C4-derived sugars with an accuracy of +/-1.5 per thousand using the previous calibration. We were able to apply this technique to plant-soil systems labelled by pulse-chase of 13CO2, revealing the nature and dynamics of sugars in the plant rhizosphere.  相似文献   

17.
An inter‐laboratory exercise was carried out by a consortium of five European laboratories to establish a set of compounds, suitable for calibrating gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS) devices, to be used as isotopic reference materials for hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen stable isotope measurements. The set of compounds was chosen with the aim of developing a mixture of reference materials to be used in analytical protocols to check for food and beverage authentication. The exercise was organized in several steps to achieve the certification level: the first step consisted of the a priori selection of chemical compounds on the basis of the scientific literature and successive GC tests to set the analytical conditions for each single compound and the mixture. After elimination of the compounds that turned out to be unsuitable in a multi‐compound mixture, some additional oxygen‐ and nitrogen‐containing substances were added to complete the range of calibration isotopes. The results of δ13C determinations for the entire set of reference compounds have previously been published, while the δD and δ18O determinations were unsuccessful and after statistical analysis of the data the results did not reach the level required for certification. In the present paper we present the results of an inter‐laboratory exercise to identify and test the set of nitrogen‐containing compounds present in the mixture developed for use as reference materials for the validation of GC‐C‐IRMS analyses in individual laboratories. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

18.
Liquid chromatography coupled to molecular mass spectrometry (LC/MS) has been a standard technique since the early 1970s but liquid chromatography coupled to high‐precision isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LC/IRMS) has only been available commercially since 2004. This development has, for the first time, enabled natural abundance and low enrichment δ13C measurements to be applied to individual analytes in aqueous mixtures creating new opportunities for IRMS applications, particularly for the isotopic study of biological molecules. A growing number of applications have been published in a range of areas including amino acid metabolism, carbohydrates studies, quantification of cellular and plasma metabolites, dietary tracer and nucleic acid studies. There is strong potential to extend these to new compounds and complex matrices but several challenges face the development of LC/IRMS methods. To achieve accurate isotopic measurements, HPLC separations must provide baseline‐resolution between analyte peaks; however, the design of current liquid interfaces places severe restrictions on compatible flow rates and in particular mobile phase compositions. These create a significant challenge on which reports associated with LC/IRMS have not previously focused. Accordingly, this paper will address aspects of chromatography in the context of LC/IRMS, in particular focusing on mixed‐mode separations and their benefits in light of these restrictions. It aims to provide an overview of mixed‐mode stationary phases and of ways to improve high aqueous separations through manipulation of parameters such as column length, temperature and mobile phase pH. The results of several practical experiments are given using proteogenic amino acids and nucleosides both of which are of noted importance in the LC/IRMS literature. This communication aims to demonstrate that mixed‐mode stationary phases provide a flexible approach given the constraints of LC/IRMS interface design and acts as a practical guide for the development of new chromatographic methods compatible with LC/IRMS applications. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
Compound-specific stable carbon isotope analysis of amino acids by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) is a highly selective and sensitive method for probing the biosynthetic/diagenetic pathways, pool size and turnover rates of proteins, previously intractable to bulk isotope analyses. However, amino acids are polyfunctional, non-volatile compounds which require derivatisation prior to GC analysis. While a wide range of derivatives exist for the GC analysis of amino acids only a handful have been utilised for their GC/C/IRMS analysis. Significantly, none of those derivatives currently employed appear completely satisfactory and a thorough assessment of their relative utility is lacking. Seven derivatives (three previously reported and four novel) for obtaining delta(13)C values of amino acids via GC/C/IRMS analysis were compared. More specifically, standard mixtures of 15 protein amino acids were converted into N-acetylmethyl (NACME) esters, N-acetyl n-propyl (NANP) esters, N-acetyl i-propyl (NAIP) esters, N-trifluoroacetyl-i-propyl (TFA-IP) esters, N-pivaloyl methyl (NPME) esters, N-pivaloyl n-propyl (NPNP) esters and N-pivaloyl i-propyl (NPIP) esters. Each derivative was assessed with respect to its applicability to carbon isotope determinations of all the common alpha-amino acids, reaction yield, chromatographic resolution, stability, analyte-to-derivative carbon ratio, kinetic isotope effects and errors associated with their carbon isotope determinations. The NACME derivative was concluded to be the preferred derivative mainly due to the highest analyte-to-derivative carbon ratio being achieved, resulting in the lowest analytical errors for amino acid delta(13)C value determinations, ranging from +/-0.6 per thousand for phenylalanine, leucine and isoleucine to +/-1.1 per thousand for serine and glycine.  相似文献   

20.
Pyrogenic organic matter (PyOM), the incomplete combustion product of organic materials, is considered stable in soils and represents a potentially important terrestrial sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide. One well‐established method of measuring PyOM in the environment is as benzene polycarboxylic acids (BPCAs), a compound‐specific method, which allows both qualitative and quantitative estimation of PyOM. Until now, stable isotope measurement of PyOM carbon involved measurement of the trimethylsilyl (TMS) or methyl (Me) polycarboxylic acid derivatives by gas chromatography–combustion–isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS). However, BPCA derivatives can contain as much as 150% derivative carbon, necessitating post‐analysis correction for the accurate measurement of δ13 C values, leading to increased measurement error. Here, we describe a method for δ13 C isotope ratio measurement and quantification of BPCAs from soil‐derived PyOM, based on ion‐exchange chromatography (IEC‐IRMS). The reproducibility of the δ13 C measurement of individual BPCAs by IEC‐IRMS was better than 0.35‰ (1σ). The δ13 C‐BPCA analysis of PyOM in soils, including at natural and artificially enriched 13 C‐abundance, produced accurate and precise δ13 C measurements. Analysis of samples that differed in δ13 C by as much as 900‰ revealed carryover of <1‰ between samples. The weighted sum of individual δ13 C‐BPCA measurements was correlated with previous isotopic measurements of whole PyOM, providing complementary information for bulk isotopic measurements. We discuss potential applications of δ13 C‐BPCA measurements, including the study of turnover rates of PyOM in soils and the partitioning of PyOM sources based on photosynthetic pathways. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

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