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Rapid and sensitive determination of free thiols by capillary zone electrophoresis with near‐infrared laser‐induced fluorescence detection using a new BODIPY‐based probe as labeling reagent
Author(s) -
Zhang LiYun,
Tu FengQin,
Guo XiaoFeng,
Wang Hong,
Wang Peng,
Zhang HuaShan
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.201400203
Subject(s) - chemistry , capillary electrophoresis , reagent , derivatization , bodipy , fluorescence , chromatography , cysteine , thiol , laser induced fluorescence , glutathione , analytical chemistry (journal) , mass spectrometry , biochemistry , organic chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , enzyme
A CZE with near‐infrared (NIR) LIF detection method has been developed for the analysis of six low molecular weight thiols including glutathione, homocysteine, cysteine, γ‐glutamylcysteine, cysteinylglycine, and N ‐acetylcysteine. For this purpose, a new NIR fluorescent probe, 1,7‐dimethyl‐3,5‐distyryl‐8‐phenyl‐(4'‐iodoacetamido)difluoroboradiaza‐ s ‐indacene was utilized as the labeling reagent, whose excitation wavelength matches the commercially available NIR laser line of 635 nm. The optimum procedure included a derivatization step of the free thiols at 45°C for 25 min and CZE analysis conducted within 14 min in the running buffer containing 16 mmol/L pH 7.0 sodium citrate and 60% v/v ACN. The LODs (S/N = 3) ranged from 0.11 nmol/L for N ‐acetylcysteine to 0.31 nmol/L for γ‐glutamylcysteine, which are better than or comparable to those reported with other derivatization‐based CE‐LIF methods. As the first trial of NIR CE‐LIF method for thiol determination, the practical application of the proposed method has been validated by detecting thiols in cucumber and tomato samples with recoveries of 96.5–104.3%.

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