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1.
Measurement of nitrite and nitrate, the stable oxidation products of nitric oxide (NO), provides a useful tool to study NO synthesis in vivo and in cell cultures. A simple and rapid fluorometric HPLC method was developed for determination of nitrite through its derivatization with 2,3-diaminonaphthalene (DAN). Nitrite, in standard solution, cell culture medium, or biological samples, readily reacted with DAN under acidic conditions to yield the highly fluorescent 2,3-naphthotriazole (NAT). For analysis of nitrate, it was converted to nitrite by nitrate reductase, followed by the derivatization of nitrite with DAN to form NAT. NAT was separated on a 5-μm reversed-phase C8 column (150×4.6 mm, I.D.) guarded by a 40-μm reversed-phase C18 column (50×4.6 mm, I.D.), and eluted with 15 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) containing 50% methanol (flow-rate, 1.3 ml/min). Fluorescence was monitored with excitation at 375 nm and emission at 415 nm. Mean retention time for NAT was 4.4 min. The fluorescence intensity of NAT was linear with nitrite or nitrate concentrations ranging from 12.5 to 2000 nM in water, cell culture media, plasma and urine. The detection limit for nitrite and nitrate was 10 pmol/ml. Because NAT is well separated from DAN and other fluorescent components present in biological samples, our HPLC method offers the advantages of high sensitivity and specificity as well as easy automation for quantifying picomole levels of nitrite and nitrate in cell culture medium and biological samples.  相似文献   

2.
A simple procedure for the determination of amphetamine in urine with minimal sample preparation is described. This method involves direct addition of human urine to an acetone-dansyl chloride solution for simultaneous deproteinization and fluorescence derivatization. The derivatized amphetamine is then measured by HPLC with fluorescence detection. It eliminates the extraction procedures often required by other HPLC or GC methods. The effects of pH, temperature and reaction time on the derivatization reaction were investigated. The stability of amphetamine-dansyl chloride in different storage conditions was examined. The detection limit and linearity associated with this assay are discussed.  相似文献   

3.
All photometric or HPLC methods described to date have been unable to detect nitrite, a reliable marker of NO synthase activity, in human blood because of its rapid metabolism within the erythrocytes. We now elaborate on method to prevent nitrite degradation during sample preparation which in combination with high-performance anion-exchange chromatography and electrochemical detection allows a sensitive measurement of nitrite. A linear current response in the concentration range of 10–1000 nmol/l nitrite was observed yielding a correlation coefficient of 0.99. In addition, the combination of the electrochemical with a UV detector allowed us to simultaneously quantify nitrate one analytical run, which is the end product of NO/nitrite metabolism. Basal levels for nitrate and nitrite in human blood were determined with 25±4 μmol/l and 578±116 nmol/l (n=8), respectively and thus were in the same concentration range as expected from NO measurement in saline perfused isolated organs or cultured endothelial cells. Therefore, the presented method may be used to assess activity of endothelial constitutive NO synthase in humans under physiological and pathophysiological conditions.  相似文献   

4.
An analytical method is described for the quantification of S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), a potent physiological vasodilator and inhibitor of platelet aggregation, in the presence of a high excess of reduced glutathione (GSH). The method is based on the quantitative elimination of GSH by N-ethylmaleimide, the conversion of GSNO by 2-mercaptoethanol to GSH, its reaction with o-phthalaldehyde (OPA) to form a highly fluorescent and UV-absorbing tricyclic isoindole derivative, and subsequent high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) separation with fluorescence and/or UV absorbance detection. The OPA derivatives of GSH and GSNO obtained by this method were found to be identical by mass spectrometry. GSH (up to 50 microM) did not interfere with the analysis of GSNO (up to 1000 nM). The limits of detection of the method for buffered aqueous solutions of GSNO were determined as 3 nM using fluorescence and 70 nM using UV absorbance detection. Isolation of GSNO by HPLC analysis (pH 7.0) of plasma ultrafiltrate samples (200 microl) prior to derivatization allows specific and artifact-free quantification of GSNO in human and rat plasma. Reduced and oxidized glutathione, nitrite, and cysteine did not interfere with the measurement of GSNO in human and rat plasma. The limit of quantitation (LOQ) of the combined method was determined as 100 nM of GSNO in human plasma ultrafiltrate using fluorescence detection. No endogenous GSNO could be detected in ultrafiltrate samples of plasma of 10 healthy humans at concentrations exceeding the LOQ of the method. After iv infusion of GSNO (125 micromol/kg body wt) in a rat for 20 min GSNO and GSH were detected in rat plasma at 60 and 130 microM, respectively. The method should be useful to investigate formation, metabolism, and reactions of GSNO in vitro and in vivo at physiologically relevant concentrations.  相似文献   

5.
A rapid HPLC method with UV absorbance detection at 333 nm for the measurement of nitrite and nitrate in ultrafiltrate samples of human plasma is described. The method is based on hydrochloric acid-catalyzed conversion of nitrite by N-acetyl-l-cysteine to S-nitroso-N-acetyl-l-cysteine and isocratic elution using 10 mM NaH2PO4 in acetonitrile–water, pH 2.0 (15:85, v/v). The limit of detection of the method is 50 nM nitrite. The method was validated by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

6.
Citrulline and nitric oxide (NO) are synthesized by NO synthase (NOS) in a 1:1-stoichiometry. In this study, we determined by HPLC arginine and citrulline concentrations by fluorescence detection and nitrate levels by UV absorbance detection in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from patients with acute hydrocephalus that underwent ventricular drainage. We found increased citrulline concentration (50.6+/-17.2 versus 20.9+/-2.0 microM) and decreased arginine/citrulline molar ratio (0.42+/-0.11 versus 1.12+/-0.16) in hydrocephalus patients, while arginine and nitrate concentrations and citrulline/nitrate molar ratio remained with little change. Citrulline has been determined as a marker of NOS activity in some studies, but it remains to be determined the extent at which this statement holds true, since other biochemical pathways also regulate the concentration of this amino acid. Our results suggest that citrulline is primarily synthesized from NOS in acute hydrocephalus. The evaluation of sample deproteinization by addition of methanol for the analysis of amino acids in CSF is also reported.  相似文献   

7.
Numerous methods are available for measurement of nitrate (NO(-)(3)). However, these assays can either be time consuming or require specialized equipment (e.g., nitrate reductase, chemiluminescent detector). We have developed a method for simultaneous evaluation of nitrate and nitrite concentrations in a microtiter plate format. The principle of this assay is reduction of nitrate by vanadium(III) combined with detection by the acidic Griess reaction. This assay is sensitive to 0.5 microM NO(-)(3) and is useful in a variety of fluids including cell culture media, serum, and plasma. S-Nitrosothiols and L-arginine derivatives were found to be potential interfering agents. However, these compounds are generally minor constituents of biological fluids relative to the concentration of nitrate/nitrite. This report introduces a new, convenient assay for the stable oxidation products of nitrogen oxide chemistry in biological samples.  相似文献   

8.
Fumonisins are mycotoxins that are produced by various Fusarium species and occur naturally in maize and maize-based foods. Fumonisins are carcinogenic, causing liver cancer in rats, and are associated with oesophageal cancer and neural tube defects in humans. Analytical methods for individual fumonisin analogues in maize rely on reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) separation after suitable extraction and clean-up. As fumonisins lack a useful chromophore or fluorophore, HPLC detection is achieved by suitable derivatization and sensitive, specific fluorescence detection. A widely used and validated method involves extract clean-up on strong anion exchange solid phase extraction cartridges and pre-column derivatization with o-phthaldialdehyde (OPA). However, many laboratories requiring infrequent fumonisin analysis are only equipped with HPLC with ultraviolet (UV) detection. A HPLC system equipped with both UV and fluorescence detectors connected in series was used to determine the extent to which UV offers an alternative to fluorescence detection in the above analytical method. Comparison of the detection systems using fumonisin standards indicated that fluorescence is about 20-times more sensitive than UV. Analysis of maize samples with differing fumonisin contamination levels indicated that, at fumonisin B1 levels above 1,000 μg/kg, the two detection systems were comparable and gave repeatabilities equal or less than 10% on six replicate analyses. Although a sensitive fumonisin analysis requires fluorescence detection, UV may offer an alternative in certain circumstances.  相似文献   

9.
In the Griess reaction, first reported by Johann Peter Griess in 1879 as a method of analysis of nitrite (NO(2)(-)), nitrite reacts under acidic conditions with sulfanilic acid (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)NH(2)) to form a diazonium cation (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)-N[triple bond]N(+)) which subsequently couples to the aromatic amine 1-naphthylamine (C(10)H(7)NH(2)) to produce a red-violet coloured (lambda(max) approximately 540 nm), water-soluble azo dye (HO(3)SC(6)H(4)-NN-C(10)H(6)NH(2)). The identification of nitrite in saliva has been the first analytical application of this diazotization reaction in 1879. For a century, the Griess reaction has been exclusively used to identify analytically bacterial infection in the urogenital tract, i.e. to identify nitrite produced by bacterial reduction of nitrate (NO(3)(-)), the major nitrogen oxide anion in human urine. Since the discovery of the l-arginine/nitric oxide (l-Arg/NO) pathway in 1987, however, the Griess reaction is the most frequently used analytical approach to quantitate the major metabolites of NO, i.e. nitrite and nitrate, in a variety of biological fluids, notably blood and urine. The Griess reaction is specific for nitrite. Analysis of nitrate by this reaction requires chemical or enzymatic reduction of nitrate to nitrite prior to the diazotization reaction. The simplicity of the Griess reaction and its easy and inexpensive analytical feasibility has attracted the attention of scientists from wide a spectrum of disciplines dedicated to the complex and challenging L-Arg/NO pathway. Today, we know dozens of assays based on the Griess reaction. In principle, every laboratory in this area uses its own Griess assay. The simplest Griess assay is performed in batch commonly as originally reported by Griess. Because of the recognition of numerous interferences in the analysis of nitrite and nitrate in biological fluids and of the desire to analyze these anions simultaneously, the Griess reaction has been repeatedly modified and automated. In recent years, the Griess reaction has been coupled to HPLC, i.e. is used for post-column derivatization of chromatographically separated nitrite and nitrate. Such a HPLC-Griess system is even commercially available. The present article gives an overview of the currently available assays of nitrite and nitrate in biological fluids based on the Griess reaction. Special emphasis is given to human plasma and urine, to quantitative aspects, as well as to particular analytical and pre-analytical factors and problems that may be associated with and affect the quantitative analysis of nitrite and nitrate in these matrices by assays based on the Griess reaction. The significance of the Griess reaction in the L-Arg/NO pathway is appraised.  相似文献   

10.
Betaine is a major metabolite of choline in liver and kidney and may be an important product of choline metabolism in other tissues. The available methods for assay of betaine, however, are time consuming and relatively insensitive. We describe a modification of published methods that provides a sensitive and specific assay for betaine by derivatization and HPLC separation with UV quantitation. Betaine and other water-soluble choline metabolites are extracted from biological samples and separated by HPLC based on mobility of 14C-labeled internal standards. The betaine fraction is collected and derivatized with 4'-bromo-phenacyl triflate. The betaine-triflate derivative is quantitated by UV absorbance and the result is corrected for possible losses due to incomplete extraction recovery and incomplete derivatization by simultaneous measurement of radioactivity from the derivatized 14C-betaine internal standard. Betaine concentrations determined with this procedure are reported for several adult and fetal rat tissues.  相似文献   

11.
Miranda et al. have developed a method for simultaneous evaluation of nitrate and nitrite concentrations using reduction of nitrate by vanadium(III) combined with detection by the acidic Griess reaction [K.M. Miranda, M.G. Espey, D.A. Wink, A rapid, simple spectrophotometric method for simultaneous detection of nitrate and nitrite, Nitric Oxide 5 (2001) 62-71]. The sensitivity of the nitrate assay decline if the mixture analyzed contains a large excess of nitrite relative to nitrate, for instance, in the case of oxidation products of nitric oxide (NO) in aerated solutions, or in sweat. By this reason nitrite should be removed before the nitrate assay, if [NO2-]>[NO3-]. Here we lay out an improved method allowing the above limitation to be erased, using sulfamic acid for nitrite removal. We also describe some modifications that enhance the reproducibility of the assay.  相似文献   

12.
A high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) method for enzyme activity assays using a hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) column in combination with an evaporative light scattering detector was developed. The method was used to measure the activity of the non-heme mono-iron enzyme cysteine dioxygenase. The substrate cysteine and the product cysteine sulfinic acid are very weak chromophores, making direct ultraviolet (UV) detection without derivatization rather insensitive; moreover, derivatization of cysteine is often not efficient. Using the system described, underivatized substrate and product in samples from cysteine dioxygenase activity assays could be separated and analyzed. Furthermore, it was possible to quantify cysteic acid, the noncatalytic oxidation product of cysteine sulfinic acid. Acetone was used both to stop the enzymatic reaction by protein precipitation and as an organic mobile phase, making sample preparation very easy and the assay highly reproducible.  相似文献   

13.
A reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) using ultraviolet (UV) absorbance detection method for simultaneous determination of clofibrate (I) and its major metabolite clofibric acid (II) in human plasma has been developed to support a clinical study. I, II and internal standard (I.S., III) are isolated from human plasma by 96-well solid-phase extraction (SPE) C(18)z.ccirf;AR plate and quantified by direct injection of the SPE eluent onto the HPLC with UV detection wavelength at 230 nm. Two chromatographic methods, isocratic and step gradient, have been validated from 1.0 to 100.0 microg/ml and successfully applied to plasma sample analysis for a clinical study. The lower limit of quantitation (LLOQ) is 1.0 microg/ml for both I and II when 500 microl plasma sample is processed. Sample collection and preparation is conducted at 5 degrees C to minimize the hydrolysis of I to II in human plasma.  相似文献   

14.
Nitrites and nitrates are widely used reporters of endogenous activity of nitric oxide synthases (NOS), an important group of enzymes producing the gaseous signal molecule nitric oxide (NO). However, due to the great chemical heterogeneity of neuronal tissues, standard analytical protocols for evaluation of neuronal nitrite/nitrate concentrations are inefficient. We optimized a high-performance capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) technique to analyze nitrite/nitrate concentrations in submicroliter samples from mammalian neuronal tissues. The measurements were made using a PrinCE 476 computerized capillary electrophoresis system with a Crystal 1000 contact conductivity detector. Isotachophoretic stacking injection of 1000- to 10000-fold diluted samples, which had been pretreated with a custom-designed solid-phase microextraction (SPME) cartridge, was employed to assay micromolar and nanomolar nitrite and nitrate levels in the presence of the high millimolar chloride concentrations characteristic of many biological samples. In the presented technique, a 10-microl volume of diluted ganglionic sample was used for chloride removal and sample cleanup. The method yields high analytical performance, including good reproducibility, resolution, and accuracy. The limits of detection relative to undiluted sample matrix were 8.9 nM (0.41 ppb) and 3.54 nM (0.22 ppb) for nitrite and nitrate, respectively. In addition, this technique resolves other anions that are present in neuronal tissues at sub-nanomolar concentrations and can be broadly applied for high-throughput anionic profiling. In rat dorsal root ganglia, endogenous levels of nitrate (231+/-29 microM; n=6) and nitrite (24-96 microM) were found. These concentrations exceeded those previously found in neuronal tissue homogenates using different techniques.  相似文献   

15.
A macro and micro assay for the spectrophotometric determination of serum nitrite and nitrate was developed. Nitrite/nitrate in biological samples can be estimated in a single step by this method. The principle of the assay is the reduction of nitrate by copper-cadmium alloy, followed by color development with Griess reagent (sulfanilamide and N-naphthylethylenediamine) in acidic medium. This assay is sensitive to 1 microM nitrate and is suitable for different biological fluids, including sera with a high lipid concentration. The copper-cadmium alloy used in the present method is easy to prepare and can completely reduce nitrate to nitrite in an hour. The present method provides a simple, cost-effective assay for the estimation of stable oxidation products of nitric oxide in biological samples.  相似文献   

16.
A simple pre-column derivatization procedure for HPLC analysis of cholesterol in biological samples was developed. Cholesterol was treated with chromic acid and sulfuric acid in acetone (the Jones oxidation) and cholest-4-en-3,6-dione was formed. The reaction was finished in 5 min at room temperature and the product showed a strong UV absorbance at 250 nm that enabled an HPLC detection limit of 0.2 pmol. With stigmasterol as an internal standard, the reaction was applied to the analysis of total and free cholesterol in serum and high-density lipoproteins and the analysis showed a within-run and total coefficient of variation of about 0.2% and 0.5%, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
Nitric oxide (NO), formed from arginine by a specific neuronal NO synthase, is an important neurotransmitter in various regions of the central nervous system. While intracerebral microdialysis is an elegant technique to study local extracellular neurotransmitter concentrations in vivo, NO metabolites (nitrate, nitrite (NO(x))) are difficult to study at high temporal resolution because of low tissue concentrations and small sample volumes. We developed a sensitive fluorometric high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-coupled NO(x) assay adapted for the use in brain microdialysate samples. The assay includes an initial enzymatic step in which nitrate is reduced to nitrite. Nitrite is acidified to N2O3, which reacts with 2,3-diaminonaphthalene to form 1-(H)-naphthotriazole. This reaction product can be readily isolated and quantitated by HPLC with fluorometric detection. The theoretical assay sensitivity is less than 1 nM, but numerous sources of contamination must be eliminated in the sampling and assaying process to reliably monitor brain NO(x) outflow by microdialysis.  相似文献   

18.
A simple and reproducible reversed-phase ion-pair high-performance liquid chromatographic (HPLC) method using isocratic elution with UV absorbance detection is presented for the simultaneous quantitation of mycophenolic acid (MPA) and MPA-glucuronide (MPAG) in human plasma and urine. The sample preparation procedures involved simple protein precipitation for plasma and 10-fold dilution for urine. Each analytical run was completed within 15min, with MPAG and MPA being eluted at 3.8 and 11.4min, respectively. The optimized method showed good performance in terms of specificity, linearity, detection and quantitation limits, precision and accuracy. This assay was demonstrated to be applicable for clinical pharmacokinetic studies.  相似文献   

19.
Mass spectrometry-based approaches are the reference techniques for the determination of nitrite and nitrate in plasma and serum. However, due to their simplicity and rapidity, assays based on the Griess reaction or HPLC are generally used in clinical studies, but they generate diverging values for nitrite/nitrate concentration. In this study, particular attention is paid to the optimization of the deproteinization procedure for plasma and serum samples prior to nitrite/nitrate analysis by an enzymatic batch Griess assay, HPLC and GC-MS. A method is reported to verify completeness of deproteinization and to correct for nonspecific contribution to the absorbance of the diazo dye at 540 nm. With the application of such optimized procedures, we were able to significantly improve the correlation between Griess and HPLC method or the GC-MS technique for nitrite+nitrate concentrations in human serum and plasma. Despite remaining potentially interfering pre-analytical and analytical factors, the procedures reported in the present study may be helpful in a critical evaluation of limits and possibilities of the enzymatic batch Griess assay as a large-scale method for nitrite/nitrate determination in human serum in clinical studies.  相似文献   

20.
A procedure for the assay of methylglyoxal in biological systems is described, together with sample storage, sample processing procedures, and statistical evaluation. Specimen data are presented. Methylglyoxal was assayed by derivatization with 1,2-diamino-4,5-dimethoxybenzene and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) of the resulting quinoxaline, 6,7-dimethoxy-2-methylquinoxaline, with spectrophotometric or fluorescence detection. Derivatization, solid-phase extraction, and HPLC were performed under acid conditions to prevent the spontaneous formation of methylglyoxal from glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and dihydroxyacetone phosphate during the assay. The limits of detection in the biological matrix were 45 pmol (absorbance detection) and 10 pmol (fluorimetric detection), the recovery was 58%, and the intra- and interbatch coefficients of variance were 7.7 and 30.0%, respectively. The concentration of methylglyoxal in whole blood from normal healthy human individuals was (mean +/- SE, nM) 256 +/- 92 (n = 12) and that from diabetic patients was 479 +/- 49 (n = 55), showing a significant increase in diabetes mellitus (P < 0.01; Mann-Whitney U test). Sample processing under acidic conditions was essential to avoid interferences. Previous estimates of the concentration of methylglyoxal in biological samples require re-evaluation.  相似文献   

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