Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1211648 Journal of Chromatography A 2006 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The application of activated pulsed amperometric detection (APAD) for the determination of orotic acid (OrA) in real samples at a gold working electrode in alkaline solutions, in combination with anion-exchange chromatography, is reported. Such an activated potential waveform was designed with an initial step that involves the formation of redox active species (e.g., adsorbed AuOH/AuO), which in turn is halted upon lowering the applied potential at the detection value while the adsorbed gold hydroxide/oxide species are still catalytically active. A direct comparison between the activated potential waveform and the more commonly used pulsed amperometric detection showed roughly a 20-fold increase in sensitivity. The chromatographic separation of OrA was accomplished by using a microbore anion-exchange column eluted with an isocratic mobile phase composed of 100 mM NaOH + 40 mM NaNO3. Orotic acid was determined at the concentration ranges of 0.2–30 μM (r = 0.9997) with an absolute detection limit of 80 pg (10 μL injected). The levels of OrA in cows’ milk samples evaluated by standard additions, using 5-aminoorotic acid as an internal standard, ranged from 56 to 126 mg/L. Lower levels were found in raw sheeps’ milk (<20 mg/L). The assay is shown to be very useful in clinical investigations where relatively high levels of OrA in human urine are correlated to metabolic diseases.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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