Abstract: | The molecular weight of biopolymers such as peptides or proteins is vital information for understanding their physical/chemical properties. The matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) and size-exclusion chromotography-multi-angle laser light scattering (SEC-MALLS) techniques each with its advantages and limitations were used for molecular weight determination of the SPf66 peptide. The precision of each method was studied using a two-factor fully-nested design with all the analyses performed by the same operator on a single instrument. The overall precision corresponded to the time-different intermediate precision (i.e. time and repeatability conditions). In the case of SEC-MALLS, all potential uncertainty components were carefully evaluated in an Ishikawa diagram, then included and mathematically combined with the uncertainty arising from the accuracy assessment to provide the overall uncertainty. In this case, the refractive-index increment with solute concentration value (dn/dc) provided the most significant contribution to the combined uncertainty. A method for its quantitation is proposed. The accuracy of method B (SEC-MALLS) against reference method A (MALDI-TOF-MS) was assessed using the interval testing hypothesis to limit the risk of unacceptable bias. The results indicate that the bias of B is higher than the limit established at 5%, and is therefore not traceable to A under the studied conditions. |