Detecting Submicromolar Analytes in Mixtures with a 5 min Acquisition on 600 MHz NMR Spectrometers.
Congcong ZhangLi XuQingxia HuangYulan WangHuiru TangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2023)
Amino compounds are widely present in complex mixtures in chemistry, biology, medicine, food, and environmental sciences involving drug impurities and metabolisms of proteins, biogenic amines, neurotransmitters, and pyrimidine in biological systems. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is an excellent tool for simultaneously identifying and quantifying these in-mixture compounds but has a limit-of-detection (LOD) over several micromolarities (>5 μM). To break such a sensitivity barrier, we developed a sensitive and rapid method by combining the probe-induced sensitivity enhancement and nonuniform-sampling-based 1 H- 13 C HSQC 2D-NMR (PRISE-NUS-HSQC). We introduced two 13 CH 3 tags for each analyte to respectively increase the 1 H and 13 C abundances for up to 6 and 200 fold. This enabled high-resolution detection of 0.4-0.8 μM analytes in mixtures in 5 mm tubes with a 5 min acquisition on 600 MHz spectrometers. The method is much more sensitive and faster than traditional 1 H- 13 C HSQC methods (∼50 μM, >10 h). Using sulfanilic acid as a single reference, furthermore, we established a database covering chemical shifts and relative-response factors for >100 compounds, enabling reliable identification and quantification. The method showed good quantitation linearity, accuracy, precision, and applicability in multiple biological matrices, offering a rapid and sensitive approach for quantitative analysis of large cohorts of chemical, medicinal, metabolomic, food, and other mixtures.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- ionic liquid
- mass spectrometry
- human health
- tandem mass spectrometry
- adverse drug
- real time pcr
- sensitive detection
- ms ms
- solid state
- magnetic resonance imaging
- label free
- drug induced
- quantum dots
- emergency department
- risk assessment
- climate change
- high performance liquid chromatography
- fluorescent probe
- living cells
- simultaneous determination
- bioinformatics analysis
- life cycle