Published: Journal of Chromatographic
Science, ISSN 0021-9665 Volume
44, Number 6, July 2006, pp.333-339
Development of an Impregnated Reagent and Automation of Solid-Phase Analytical Derivatization for Carbonyls: Proof of Principle
J. Rosenfeld[1], M. Kim[2], and A. Rullo[2]
[1]Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine and
[2]Central Analytical Laboratory, Faculty of Health Sciences,
McMaster University, Hamilton Ontario, Canada
This study undertakes reduction of scale
and automation of a solid-phase analytical derivatization of carbonyls
with 2,4-dinitrophenylhyrazine on a styrene-divinylbenzene resin
(XAD-2). Three processes are tested. In the batch process, an
aqueous phase consisting of 50 µL of sample and 150 µL
of reagent solution is contacted with 6 mg XAD-2 by shaking. An
impregnated reagent consisting of 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine hydrochloride
(DNPH) deposited on XAD-2 enables two additional processes. In-vial
derivatization with an impregnated reagent requires shaking 50
µL of sample with 6 mg of the impregnated reagent and reduced
the reaction time from 10 to 5 min. The third process involves
packing impregnated reagent a mini-column and flowing 50 µL
of sample through under positive pressure supplied by a Harvard
Pump. This reduces sample preparation time to 1 min. Studies are
conducted with worst-case model analytes: butanone, 2-pentanone,
and malonyldialdehyde. The carbonyl of the two ketones is hindered,
and, thus, these two compounds react very slowly with DNPH in
aqueous solution. Malonyldialdehyde is highly water soluble, and
it does not react in aqueous phase but also would not sorb onto
XAD-2 for reaction. Nevertheless, derivatization/extraction of
all model compounds any of the three procedures result in reproducible
and high yields.
Reproduction
of editorial content of this journal is prohibited without publishers
permission.
This
article is available in its entirety by fax for $4.00 per
page.
Visa or MasterCard accepted.
To
order electronicallyclick
here or call: 847-647-2900 ext. 1323 or fax request to: 847-647-1155.
Please
indicate JCS volume and issue along with
page numbers.