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HPLC and MS/MS Method for the Separation and Identification of Inositol Phosphates in C. Reinhardtii

Inositol phosphates (IPs) have important cellular functions from teleomere maintenance (IP7 and IP8) to Ca2+ signaling pathways (1, 4, 5-IP3). Yet there is no robust, quantitative method to separate all the inositol phosphate isomers from IP1 to IP8. Four findings contributed heavily towards the development of a robust, quantitative IP isomer separation and identification method on the EskpertTM MicroLC 200+ QTrap 6500 system with a SelexIonTM DMS attachment. 1) TCA from inositol phosphate algal extractions was removed by elution with 100 mM ammonium carbonate, ammonium formate, or ammonium bicarbonate or by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (Fe-NTA columns). 2) A 250 mM ammonium carbonate and 25% methanol gradient was run on a weak anion exchange column to separate all the inositol phosphates from each other (IP1 through IP8. 3) Using ten different inositol phosphate isomer standards and fluoro- IP3 as an internal standard for future quantitation and recovery studies, isomer separation was obtained using SelexIonTM DMS with a 2- propanol modifier. 4) Ion suppression of inositol phosphate signals caused by 250 mM ammonium carbonate can be alleviated with a post-column dilution. The final assembled EskpertTM MicroLC 200+ QTrap 6500 system with a SelexIonTM DMS attachment and post-column dilution method was able to separate out IP isomers from IP1 to IP6 and detect IP7 and IP8. Once further optimized using the full compensation voltage range and a more polar modifier such as methanol, this method will allow the lipid biosynthesis pathways of C. reinhardtii, a promising candidate for algal biofuels, to be better studied.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:CLAREMONT/oai:scholarship.claremont.edu:cmc_theses-2352
Date01 January 2016
CreatorsTu, Travis Y
PublisherScholarship @ Claremont
Source SetsClaremont Colleges
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceCMC Senior Theses
Rights© 2015 Travis Y. Tu, default

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