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Chromatographic Detection Using Tris(2,2‘-bipyridyl)ruthenium(III) as a Fluorogenic Electron-Transfer Reagent

Authors :
William R. Even
Stephen G. Weber
Steven J. Woltman
Source :
Analytical Chemistry. 71:1504-1512
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 1999.

Abstract

Tris(2,2'-bipyridyl)ruthenium can be excited to fluorescence by visible light (lambda abs 454 nm, lambda em 607 nm) when in the M(II) oxidation state, but not in the M(III) state. A novel chromatographic detection method using the non-fluorescent M(III) form of the complex as a postcolumn fluorogenic reagent is demonstrated. The M(III) form is a powerful oxidizing agent (E degree = 1.27 V vs NHE, 1.05 V vs Ag/AgCl). The M(III) reagent is generated on-line from the M(II) form of the complex by a highly efficient porous carbon electrode and then reacted briefly with chromatographic effluent; the M(II) created by electron transfer from oxidation-susceptible analytes is then detected by fluorescence. The fluorescence detector can be calibrated for number of electrons transferred by injection of either M(II) or an oxidative standard such as ferrocyanide. It is hoped that this redox-based detection scheme will provide an alternative to electrochemical detection. Among the advantages are freedom from surface fouling and the potential for extremely low detection limits. The scheme was applied to detection of the peptide dynorphin A and several of its fragments. Dynorphin A contains tyrosine at the N-terminus (position 1) and tryptophan in position 15; these amino acid residues are susceptible to oxidation and peptides containing them can be detected on that basis. Flow injection testing of the model compounds Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu and Gly-Gly-Trp-Gly indicated that tyrosine transferred approximately 1 electron to the M(III) reagent and that tryptophan transferred approximately 4 electrons. Similar results were obtained from the chromatographic runs. Dynorphin A and six dynorphin A fragments containing the N-terminal tyrosine were detected easily at 100 nM concentration (14 pmol) using laser-induced fluorescence. As expected, one fragment that did not contain tryptophan or tyrosine was not detected. A mass detection limit of 80 fmol was estimated for the tyrosine-containing fragments.

Details

ISSN :
15206882 and 00032700
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Analytical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cb054795ff9d47e6c72ddebbc8ced642
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/ac981181e