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Liquid chromatographic determination of acetylcholine based on pre‐column alkaline cleavage reaction and post‐column tris(2,2′‐bipyridyl)ruthenium(III) chemiluminescence detection
Author(s) -
Yoshida Hideyuki,
Yamada Akifumi,
Todoroki Kenichiro,
Imakyure Osamu,
Nohta Hitoshi,
Yamaguchi Masatoshi
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
luminescence
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.428
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1522-7243
pISSN - 1522-7235
DOI - 10.1002/bio.1103
Subject(s) - chemistry , chemiluminescence , ruthenium , chromatography , detection limit , tris , acetonitrile , elution , catalysis , organic chemistry , biochemistry
Abstract A method for the determination of acetylcholine (ACh) has been developed using liquid chromatography with chemiluminescence detection. This method is based on the pre‐column alkaline cleavage of ACh to form trimethylamine (TMA) and the post‐column tris(2,2′‐bipyridyl)ruthenium(III) chemiluminescence detection of TMA. ACh was converted to TMA with high yield at 180°C in the presence of lithium hydroxide, and the produced TMA was separated on a cation‐exchange/reversed‐phase dual‐functional column using a mixture of 0.2 m potassium phosphate buffer (pH 5.9) and acetonitrile (20:1, v/v) as the mobile phase. The eluate was online mixed with acidic tris(2,2′‐bipyridyl)ruthenium(III) solution, and the generated chemiluminescence was detected. The detection limit (signal‐to‐noise ratio = 3) for ACh was 0.80 nmol/mL, which corresponded to 1.1 pmol TMA per injection volume of 5 µL. This is simple and robust method that does not need an expensive device and unstable enzymes, and was applied to the determination of ACh in pharmaceutical formulations. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.