Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1203557 Journal of Chromatography A 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

An efficient microwave-assisted high-throughput protein hydrolysis protocol was developed utilizing strongly microwave absorbing silicon carbide-based microtiter platforms. The plates are equipped with 20 bore holes having the proper dimensions for holding standard screw-capped HPLC/GC vials. Due to the possibility of heating up to four heating platforms simultaneously (80 vials), parallel microwave-assisted acid hydrolyses can be performed under carefully controlled conditions significantly reducing the overall time required for protein hydrolysis and the subsequent evaporation step required for larger volumes of acid. An extensive optimization of the hydrolysis conditions has demonstrated that 5 min irradiation at 160 °C with 6 N HCl leads to comparable results in terms of total and individual amino acid recovery as the traditional method requiring 24 h heating at 110 °C. Complete hydrolysis of several proteins and synthetic peptides was performed using 25 μg of sample material and 100 μL of 6 N HCl in a dedicated low-volume HPLC/GC vial. Since the hydrolysis and subsequent analysis can be performed from the same vial, errors caused by sample transfer can be minimized. Control experiments have demonstrated that the observed rate enhancements are the result of a purely thermal/kinetic effect as a consequence of the considerable higher reaction temperatures.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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