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Sample Handling Techniques in Biological and Environmental Applications Emphasizing Biomolecular Recognition and MALDI-TOF MS

Önnerfjord, Patrik LU orcid (1999)
Abstract
The use of restricted access media and other stationary phases for clean-up and trace enrichment of environmental samples coupled on-line to liquid chromatography using diode array detection as well as thermospray MS is described. This on-line configuration was compared with commercially available ELISAs for the determination of triazines in complex matrices, showing superior precision and accuracy with the chromatographic method. However, less matrix dependence and higher sample throughputs were obtained with the immunoassays. Immunoreagents were characterized for the development of competitive triazine immunoassays using fluorescence polarization. The obtained information was used for the development of a high sample throughput flow... (More)
The use of restricted access media and other stationary phases for clean-up and trace enrichment of environmental samples coupled on-line to liquid chromatography using diode array detection as well as thermospray MS is described. This on-line configuration was compared with commercially available ELISAs for the determination of triazines in complex matrices, showing superior precision and accuracy with the chromatographic method. However, less matrix dependence and higher sample throughputs were obtained with the immunoassays. Immunoreagents were characterized for the development of competitive triazine immunoassays using fluorescence polarization. The obtained information was used for the development of a high sample throughput flow immunoassay. This assay is based on the separation of bound and free label using a restricted access column. A sample throughput of 80 samples/h was achieved with detection limits in the low ppb range. Environmental as well as biological samples such as blood and urine were successfully applied.



The second part of this thesis deals with the sample handling and sample preparation of protein and peptide samples for subsequent MALDI-TOF MS analysis. Silicon micromachining has been used for the construction of a flow-through piezo-electric microdispenser, capable of handling picoliter volumes. The microdispenser is used to deposit samples onto a MALDI target plate and can be used either as a sample injector or on-line coupled to a chromatographic separation. Multiple depositions of sample was reported to increase the sensitivity. The generation of homogenous sample spots is indispensable in automated MS-analysis. Therefore, a simple method generating homogenous surfaces have been developed. These surfaces can also be obtained using the micro-dispenser, allowing high density MALDI target plates to be used. The development of a silicon micro-reactor for the enzymatic digestion of proteins coupled on-line to the microdispenser is also described. The enzymatic digestion is based on immobilized endoproteases such as trypsin and chymotrypsin. The generation of peptide maps are used for the identification of proteins through database searching. The enhanced surface area, the decreased digestion time, as well as the small dimensions are some of the advantages to the system. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Prof Regnier, Fred E., Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, IN, USA
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
protein identification, microchip IMER, microdispensing, MALDI-TOF MS, fluorescence polarization, flow immunoassay, pesticide immunoassays, phenol biosensor, restricted access media, SPE, Analytical chemistry, Analytisk kemi
pages
168 pages
publisher
Analytical Chemistry, Lund University
defense location
Chemical Center, Lecture Hall D
defense date
1999-03-19 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: LUNKDL/NKAK-1047/1-168 (1999)
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
Article: I. On-line solid phase extraction in liquid chromatography using restricted access pre-columns for the analysis of s-triazines in humic containing watersP. Önnerfjord, D. Barceló, J. Emnéus, L. Gorton, G. Marko-Varga,J. Chromatogr. A., 737, 35-45 (1996) Article: II. Tyrosinase graphite-epoxy based composite electrodes for detection of phenolsP. Önnerfjord, J. Emnéus, G. Marko-Varga, L. Gorton, F. Ortega and E. Domínguez,Biosensors & Bioelectronics, 10, 607-619 (1995) Article: III. Performance of two immunoassays for the determination of atrazine in sea water samples as compared with on-line solid phase extraction-liquid chromatography-diode array detectionJ. Gascón, A. Oubiña, P. Önnerfjord, I. Ferrer, B. D. Hammock, G. Marko-Varga, M.-P. Marco, and D. BarcelóAnal. Chim. Acta, 330, 41-51 (1996) Article: IV. Fluorescence polarisation for characterisation of immunoreagentsP. Önnerfjord, S. Eremin, J. Emnéus and G. Marko-VargaJ. Immunological Methods, 213, 31-39 (1998) Article: V. High sample throughput flow immunoassay utilising restricted access columns for the separation of bound and free labelP. Önnerfjord, S. Eremin, J. Emnéus and G. Marko-VargaJ. Chromatogr. A , 800, 219-230 (1998) Article: VI. Picoliter sample preparation in MALDI-TOF-MS using a silicon flow-through dispenserP. Önnerfjord, J. Nilsson, L. Wallman, T. Laurell and G. Marko-VargaAnal. Chem. 70, 4755-4760 (1998) Article: VII. Integrated micro-analytical platform technology for automated protein identification.S. Ekström, P. Önnerfjord, J. Nilsson, T. Laurell and G. Marko-VargaManuscript (1999) Article: VIII. Homogenous sample preparation for automated high throughput analysis of peptides and proteins using matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometryP. Önnerfjord, S. Ekström, J. Bergquist, J. Nilsson, T. Laurell and G. Marko-VargaRapid Commun. Mass Spectrom., 13, 315-322 (1999) The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Analytical Chemistry (S/LTH) (011001004), Connective Tissue Biology (013230151)
id
a4e506d0-28db-4171-b8b9-8c40c146e7cf (old id 39352)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:23:00
date last changed
2023-10-19 15:50:32
@phdthesis{a4e506d0-28db-4171-b8b9-8c40c146e7cf,
  abstract     = {{The use of restricted access media and other stationary phases for clean-up and trace enrichment of environmental samples coupled on-line to liquid chromatography using diode array detection as well as thermospray MS is described. This on-line configuration was compared with commercially available ELISAs for the determination of triazines in complex matrices, showing superior precision and accuracy with the chromatographic method. However, less matrix dependence and higher sample throughputs were obtained with the immunoassays. Immunoreagents were characterized for the development of competitive triazine immunoassays using fluorescence polarization. The obtained information was used for the development of a high sample throughput flow immunoassay. This assay is based on the separation of bound and free label using a restricted access column. A sample throughput of 80 samples/h was achieved with detection limits in the low ppb range. Environmental as well as biological samples such as blood and urine were successfully applied.<br/><br>
<br/><br>
The second part of this thesis deals with the sample handling and sample preparation of protein and peptide samples for subsequent MALDI-TOF MS analysis. Silicon micromachining has been used for the construction of a flow-through piezo-electric microdispenser, capable of handling picoliter volumes. The microdispenser is used to deposit samples onto a MALDI target plate and can be used either as a sample injector or on-line coupled to a chromatographic separation. Multiple depositions of sample was reported to increase the sensitivity. The generation of homogenous sample spots is indispensable in automated MS-analysis. Therefore, a simple method generating homogenous surfaces have been developed. These surfaces can also be obtained using the micro-dispenser, allowing high density MALDI target plates to be used. The development of a silicon micro-reactor for the enzymatic digestion of proteins coupled on-line to the microdispenser is also described. The enzymatic digestion is based on immobilized endoproteases such as trypsin and chymotrypsin. The generation of peptide maps are used for the identification of proteins through database searching. The enhanced surface area, the decreased digestion time, as well as the small dimensions are some of the advantages to the system.}},
  author       = {{Önnerfjord, Patrik}},
  keywords     = {{protein identification; microchip IMER; microdispensing; MALDI-TOF MS; fluorescence polarization; flow immunoassay; pesticide immunoassays; phenol biosensor; restricted access media; SPE; Analytical chemistry; Analytisk kemi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Analytical Chemistry, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Sample Handling Techniques in Biological and Environmental Applications Emphasizing Biomolecular Recognition and MALDI-TOF MS}},
  year         = {{1999}},
}