Reaction monitoring
11309172 · 2022-04-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Robert Graham Cooks (West Lafayette, IN)
- Xin Yan (West Lafayette, IN, US)
- Christopher Pulliam (West Lafayette, IN, US)
- Ryan M. Bain (West Lafayette, IN, US)
- Tawnya Flick (Thousand Oaks, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H01J49/0031
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01J49/04
ELECTRICITY
H01J49/16
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The invention generally relates to systems and methods for on-line reaction monitoring. In certain embodiments, the invention provides systems that include a reaction vessel having an outlet, a quantitation unit coupled to the outlet and configured to introduce internal standard and solvent into reaction solution flowed from the reaction vessel, one or more ion generating devices that receive flow from the quantitation unit, and a mass spectrometer. In certain embodiments, the invention provides systems for multiple reaction monitoring that include a plurality of reaction vessels, a plurality of ion generating devices, a plurality of channels, each channel coupling a reaction vessel to an ion generating device, an actuator coupled to the plurality of ion generating devices to thereby allow movement of the plurality of ion generating devices, and a mass spectrometer.
Claims
1. A reaction monitoring system, the system comprising: a reaction vessel comprising an outlet; a quantitation unit coupled to the outlet and configured to introduce internal standard and solvent into a reaction mixture flowed from the reaction vessel, wherein the quantitation unit comprises: a first mixer in fluid communication with the outlet and an internal standard reservoir and operable to receive reaction mixture and internal standard respectively therefrom; a second mixer in fluid communication with the first mixer and operable to receive mixed reaction mixture and internal standard therefrom; a third mixer after the quantitation unit and in fluid communication with the second mixture, the third mixer comprising a first inlet that receives fluid flow from the second mixer, a second inlet that receives a spray solvent and an outlet; one or more ion generating devices in fluid communication with the third mixer and operable to receive flow therefrom via one or more channels; and a mass spectrometer that receives ions from the one or more ion generating devices.
2. The system according to claim 1, wherein the mixer comprises a plurality of inlets and a union, wherein one of a plurality of inlets of the first mixer is coupled to the reaction vessel, another of the plurality of inlets of the first mixer is connected to the internal standard reservoir, and one or more outlets of the first mixer is coupled to the second mixer of the one or more mixers, which comprises one or more outlets that couple to the one or more ion generating devices.
3. The system according to claim 2, wherein the second mixer comprises one or more outlets operably coupled to two ion generating devices.
4. The system according to claim 3, wherein each ion generating device is configured for inductive charging electrospray ionization.
5. The system of claim 3, wherein one of the two ion generating devices is in fluid communication with a solvent reservoir and operable to receive additional solvent to dilute, relative to the other ion generation device, the mixed reaction mixture and internal standard.
6. The system according to claim 1, wherein the one or more ion generating devices are coupled to an actuator, the system further comprising: one or more additional reaction vessels, each operably associated with an additional ion generating device coupled to the actuator, wherein the actuator is configured to allow movement of the one or more ion generating devices and each additional ion generating device relative to the mass spectrometer.
7. The system of claim 1, wherein the first mixer is in fluid communication with a solvent source and operable to receive solvent therefrom.
8. A system for quantifying multiple reactions, the system comprising: a plurality of reaction vessels, each comprising an outlet; a plurality of quantitation units each coupled to one of the outlets and configured to introduce internal standard and solvent into reaction solution flowed from one of the plurality of reaction vessels, wherein each of the plurality of quantitation units comprises a first mixer for receiving reaction solution, solvent, and internal standard and a second mixer for receiving the mixed reaction solution, solvent, and internal standard from the first mixer; a plurality of third mixers, each coupled after each of the plurality of quantitation units to one of the outlets of the second mixers and in fluid communication with the second mixture of each of the plurality of quantitation units, each of the plurality of third mixers comprising a first inlet that receives fluid flow from the second mixer, a second inlet that receives a spray solvent and an outlet; one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units, the one or more ion generating devices each configured to receive flow from its associated third mixer of the plurality of third mixers via one or more channels connecting between each of the plurality of quantitation units and the one or more ion generating devices; a mass spectrometer that receives ions from the one or more ion generating devices; and an actuator coupled to the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units to thereby allow movement of the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units relative to the mass spectrometer.
9. The system according to claim 8, wherein the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units are nano-electrospray ionization probes.
10. The system according to claim 9, wherein the actuator comprises a rotary stage that holds each of the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units, and wherein the actuator further comprises an electrode positioned proximate the rotary stage to impart an electric charge to each of the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units as the one or more ion generating devices for each of the plurality of quantitation units rotate past the electrode.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(22) On-line continuous monitoring of solution phase reagent concentrations is difficult to achieve, unlike head space (vapor) analysis for which a large set of methods is possible including gas chromatography/high-performance liquid chromatography, IR spectroscopy, Ramen spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance and electrochemistry.
(23) The difficulties of on-line continuous solution-phase monitoring lie in both the sampling step and in the measurement step. The former must be achieved without significantly depleting the bulk sample in the reactor and without phase change during transfer. The measurement step is complicated by the fact that reactant, intermediate and product concentrations vary greatly over the course of a reaction, that working concentrations of particular analytes often lie outside of the linear dynamic range for particular measurement devices, the fact that very rapid measurements are needed, and the fact that complex mixtures must be analyzed. Several process analytical chemistry (PAC) tools have been utilized to address this problem, and among them IR and Raman spectroscopy are prominent.
(24) The capabilities of mass spectrometry for trace as well as bulk analysis, as well as the molecular specificity and speed of the technique make it highly attractive for application in on-line reaction monitoring. Amongst the ionization methods that are available for solution phase analysis, spray based methods like ESI are the most attractive but the propensity for the tips in ESI and especially nESI emitters to clog is a severe drawback. The use of porous media for paper spray and related ionization methods addresses this problem but continuous, long-term quantitative analysis using PS has not been demonstrated.
(25) One solution to the problem is inductive application of the voltage needed to create charged droplets. Inductive electrospray ionization (iESI) is a variant of electrospray ionization (ESI) which accurately controls the creation of charged droplets by placing an electrode near a spray emitter and pulsing it repetitively to high positive potential. Inductive ESI provides several new capabilities: it is characterized by a remarkable tolerance to matrix and to salt effects and it has a high efficiency. iESI avoids the clogging problem because the DC voltage pulse circuit ‘rings’ by polarizing the solution first in one direction then in the opposite and avoiding product build up from electrochemical reactions and/or solvent evaporation at the spray tip. Inductive electrospray ionization is described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 9,184,036 and U.S. patent application publication number 2014/0051180, the content of each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
(26) An on-line reaction monitoring system based on inductive-ESI-MS (iESI-MS) has been reported as a simple way to monitor chemical reactions in real time. Such a system is described in U.S. patent application publication number 2014/0051180, the content of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. This system automatically samples reaction mixtures in-situ, delivers them to the MS inlet, continuously monitors the reaction mixture and so provides virtually real-time information on the nature of intermediates and products in the mixture by observing their dynamic profiles as shown in
(27) As discussed above, besides the qualitative analysis of species in the reaction mixture, quantitative information on the starting materials, intermediates and products is needed and achieving this capability is much more demanding. Detailed reaction kinetics can be obtained only when quantitative monitoring tools are available. Unfortunately, in the available reaction monitoring systems (including that of
(28) The invention provides an on-line device based on iESI-MS to determine the concentrations of compounds of interest in reaction mixtures (
(29) In this exemplary embodiment, the plug-in quantitation device (
(30) Valves of the device may be any valve capable of selectively allowing or stopping flow of a liquid within tubing or channels of the invention. For example ball valves, butterfly valves, gate valves, globe valves, needle valves, or other valves known in the art may be used.
(31) Turning back to the exemplary embodiment, as the reaction mixture, internal standard and large flow of spray solvent converge at mixer 1, the increased pressure is released by four outlets of mixer 1 and converge again in mixer 2 with outlet capillary of larger ID (e.g., 530 μm). The design also disrupts the laminal flow and greatly enhances the mixing of three different compounds. Union 3 helps further mixing and completes in a uniform solution. In this device, two outlets (O1 and O2) are provided, each subjecting the reaction mixture to a different dilution factor, and each connected to a separate iESI emitter to provide on-line quantitation of analytes present over particular ranges of concentrations.
(32) In certain embodiments, systems and methods of the invention relate to on-line multiple reaction monitoring. In various embodiments, on-line reaction monitoring may be carried out by slightly pressurizing a reaction vessel using air or an inert gas. The solution can then be flowed through a fused silica filling a continuous-flow nano-electrospray (CF-nESI) emitter. The solution may then be analyzed with a mass spectrometer (e.g., a home-built miniature mass spectrometer such as the Mini 12 described in Li, et al., Mini 12, Miniature Mass Spectrometer for Clinical and Other Applications—Introduction and Characterization, Anal. Chem., 2014, 86 (6), pp 2909-2916, incorporated herein by reference). Multi-sample monitoring can be performed in a similar manner but with multiple pressurized reaction vessels delivering solution to multiple CF-nESI emitters. As the instrument is running, the CF-nESI probes may be moved in front of the MS inlet using an automated linear actuator and analyzed sequentially for several hours until the reaction is complete. Reactions can be analyzed for several hours with a time resolution of, for example, 20 seconds allowing four reactions to be monitored simultaneously with a time resolution 80 seconds.
(33) An exemplary system of the invention is shown in
(34) Each vessel can include a channel or tube that extends from the vessel to an actuator. The channel or tube allows a portion of reaction solution in each vessel to flow out of each reaction vessel as the reactions are occurring in the vessels. Exemplary channels include, for example, fused silica capillaries but the invention is not limited to only fused silica capillaries. Any tubing can be used and the choice will be based on the reaction to be monitored (e.g., to minimize chemical interaction with the tubing/channel), desired flow rate, etc. The channel can be clear, opaque, translucent, etc., depending on the light sensitivity of the reaction and to allow for observation of the system. The reaction vessels as well as the mixers, valves, and other components described herein may be constructed of similar materials based on the same considerations as given for the channel materials.
(35) The channels may then each couple to an actuator, which is exemplarily shown in
(36) Any mass spectrometer known in the art can be used with systems and methods of the invention. The mass spectrometer may be a bench-top mass spectrometer or a miniature mass spectrometer, such as described for example in Gao et al. (Z. Anal. 15 Chem. 2006, 78, 5994-6002), Gao et al. (Anal. Chem., 80:7198-7205, 2008), Hou et al. (Anal. Chem., 83:1857-1861, 2011), Sokol et al. (Int. J. Mass Spectrom., 2011, 306, 187-195), Xu et al. (JALA, 2010, 15, 433-439); Ouyang et al. (Anal. Chem., 2009, 81, 2421-2425); Ouyang et al. (Ann. Rev. Anal. Chem., 2009, 2, 187-25214); Sanders et al. (Euro. J. Mass Spectrom., 2009, 16, 11-20); Gao et al. (Anal. Chem., 2006, 78(17), 5994-6002); Mulligan et al. (Chem. Com., 2006, 1709-1711); and Fico et al. (Anal. Chem., 2007, 79, 8076-8082), the content of each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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(39) Using such a set-up, reaction solution from multiple reactions can be sequentially and continuously injected into the mass spectrometer for analysis. In that manner, multiple reactions may be simultaneously monitored over a period of time.
(40) Turning back to
INCORPORATION BY REFERENCE
(41) References and citations to other documents, such as patents, patent applications, patent publications, journals, books, papers, web contents, have been made throughout this disclosure. All such documents are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entirety for all purposes.
EQUIVALENTS
(42) Various modifications of the invention and many further embodiments thereof, in addition to those shown and described herein, will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the full contents of this document, including references to the scientific and patent literature cited herein. The subject matter herein contains important information, exemplification and guidance that can be adapted to the practice of this invention in its various embodiments and equivalents thereof.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
(43) A solution of L-Arg (100 μM) was prepared in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=2:1), injected at E1 (see
(44) The device produced different dilution factors at each outlet, which allows compatibility of samples with different concentrations in one mixture using dilution factors that cause their concentrations to fall to within their linear dynamic ranges for each chosen sprayer (and hence dilution factor) and so optimize quantification by MS. The optimized conditions were found when using a flow rate of 30 μL/min for E1 and E2, 450 μL/min for E3 and E4, they corresponded to 17 times dilution at O1, 255 times dilution at O2 (shown by the labelled dots in
(45) System dead time can be defined as the lag between the status of the bulk-phase reaction and the time of subsequent mass analysis. L-Arg was injected into E1 (
(46) Protonated and sodiated species are commonly observed in electrospray ionization, where the adventitious sodium ions come from the walls of the glass capillary and from traces of salts in the system. Molecules with high proton affinity present only protonated ion forms such as L-Arg, whether in pure solution or in the reaction mixture (
(47) L-Arg-.sup.13C.sub.6 was used as internal standard for quantitation of both Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg as well as L-Arg, considering their structural similarities and the convenience of simultaneous quantitation of both analytes in the reaction mixture. A series of Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg solutions with known concentrations (15, 150, 1500, 15000, 150000 μM) and known L-Arg solutions (15, 150, 1500, 15000, 150000 μM) were introduced into the quantitation system separately and mixed with internal standard L-Arg-.sup.13C.sub.6 (13 mM) and diluted with ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=1:1) at Mixer 1 and homogenized at Mixer 2 and union 3 (
Example 2
(48) Synthetic arginine-rich peptides are efficient transporters of diverse biomolecules including nucleic acids, peptides, and proteins into the cytoplasmic and nuclei of living cells. As a result, arginine-containing peptides and conjugates show activity as therapeutic agents. A method to couple arginine (or Nω-nitroarginine) to the N-termini of amino acids and peptides using a benzotriazole derivative has been published. Katritzky, A. R.; Meher, G.; Narindoshvili, T. J. Org. Chem. 2008, 73, 7153-7158, incorporated herein by reference. The reaction of L-arginine with N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl)-benzotriazole to provide Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg dipeptide (Scheme 1) was analyzed to test the performance of the present on-line monitoring apparatus.
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(50) L-Arg and N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl) benzotriazole, were mixed and suspended in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v 5:3). The reaction mixture was then continuously sampled at E1 (
(51) The reaction was then monitored quantitatively under the optimized reaction conditions (mild base) and monitored on-line using the on-line MS quantitation device under optimized monitoring conditions by infusing the internal standard L-Arg-.sup.13C.sub.6 and formic acid in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v, 2:1) solutions into the reaction mixture to give spectra of the type shown in
−dc.sub.(L-Arg)/dt=kc.sub.(L-Arg)×c.sub.(aminoacyl benzotriazole)=kc.sup.2.sub.(L-Arg)
−dc.sub.(L-Arg)/c.sub.(L-Arg)=kc.sub.(L-Arg)dt
(1/c.sub.(L-Arg)t)−(1/c.sub.(L-Arg)0)=kt
Example 3
(52) The Wolff-Kishner reduction reaction was performed with various aldehydes and hydrazines for single and multi-sample reaction monitoring. Isatin and phenylhydrazine were reacted and immediately sampled for the next 2.5 hours. During this time, it was possible to observe the starting material, the hydrazone intermediate and the final product, as well as dimers and characteristic fragments. The reaction of isatin and hydrazine resulted in a similar outcome. After analyzing the reactions independently, both reactions were carried out and analyzed simultaneously. One immediate trade-off between single reaction monitoring and multiple reaction monitoring is the reduced time resolution as a function of the number of samples monitored (n).
Time resolution=20 seconds×n
(53) Although the time resolution decreased by a factor of 2 (note, n=2), this was still adequate time and spectral resolution to observe all of the ions of interest as seen in the previous experiments. Upon successful analysis of two reactions, four reactions were run simultaneously. This was done with the addition of phenylhydrazine reacted with tolualdehyde and anisaldehyde. Using four CF-nESI probes the time resolution is approximately 80 seconds. This was still adequate time to monitoring reactions lasting for hours. To test the stability of the instrument, reaction mixtures were run for 12 hours with minimal contamination and little signal fluctuation.
Example 4
(54) Systems of the invention were used to simultaneously monitor three reactions.
Example 5
(55) Systems of the invention were used to simultaneously monitor six reactions.
Example 6
(56) As describe above, inductive electrospray ionization mass spectrometry may be used as the basis for an on-line quantitative reaction monitoring system which allows one to track and quantify chemical reactions in real time. A plug-in quantitation device can connect the reactor to the mass spectrometer and permit the accurate introduction of internal standards without affecting the reaction or later product separation. It also allows dilution of aliquots of the reaction solution by variable factors, so that the working concentration of each analyte falls within its linear dynamic range, facilitating accurate quantitation. The reaction of L-arginine with N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl)-benzotriazole to yield the dipeptide Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg was successfully quantified using this system. The kinetics of the reaction are described below.
(57) An on-line device based on inductive ESI-MS was designed and built to determine the concentrations of compounds of interest in reacting mixtures. The reaction of L-arginine and N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl)-benzotriazole to yield a dipeptide Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg was monitored quantitatively as a proof-of-concept experiment. In the on-line quantitation system, small aliquots of the reaction mixture are taken, diluted to the extent needed, and mixed with known amounts of an appropriate internal standard (IS). Selected reaction monitoring (SRM) measurements are made on both the analyte and IS in the same solution. The entire operation, including sampling, dilution, and internal standard addition and SRM measurements, takes place within a minute or so and uses microliter volumes of reaction solution.
(58) All reagents and solvents were of analytical grade or higher and were used directly without further purification. L-Arginine, L-Arg-13C6, N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl)-benzotriazole, ammonium hydroxide and HPLC grade acetonitrile (ACN) and methanol (MeOH) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, Mo., USA). Water was purified and deionized using a Milli-Q system (Millipore, Bedford, Mass., USA).
(59) Quantitative reaction monitoring was performed using a TSQ Quantum Access MAX (Thermo Scientific, San Jose, Calif.) in the multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode. Each monitoring experiment interrogated precursor/product ion pairs using narrow mass windows (m/z 0.010) for each ion for a period of 75 ms, repeated 20 times over a total of 1.5 s measurement time for each transition. Inlet capillary temperature and voltage were 300° C. and 35 V, respectively. The most abundant fragment was used for quantification.
(60) Data were processed using the manufacturer's Xcalibur Quan Browser. Peaks were integrated, and quantification was performed using the ratio of the areas under the curves for the analyte and internal standard. Trend lines were constructed using linear least-squares.
(61) Synthesis of Dipeptide Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg as its quantitation standard: N-(Cbz-isopropyl-aminoacyl)-benzotriazole (172.5 mg, 0.5 mmol) was added at 20° C. to a solution of L-arginine (85.05 mg, 0.5 mmol) in ACN (10 mL)/H2O (5 mL). The reaction mixture was then stirred at 20° C. until the starting material was completely consumed as observed by MS. After addition of 4 N HCl (1 mL), the solution was concentrated under reduced pressure to remove ACN. The residue was extracted with EtOAc (20 mL), and the organic extract was washed with 4 N HCl (5 mL) and saturated NaCl (10 mL) and then dried over anhydrous MgSO4. Evaporation of the solvent gave the desired product arginine-valine dipeptide in pure form, which was recrystallized from MeOH/Et2O.
(62) Referring to the system illustrated in
(63) Turning back to the exemplary embodiment, as the reaction mixture, internal standard and large flow of spray solvent converge at mixer 1, the increased pressure is released by four outlets of mixer 1 and converge again in mixer 2 with outlet capillary of larger ID (530 um). The design also disrupts the laminar flow and greatly enhances the mixing of three different compounds. Union 3 helps further mixing and completes in a uniform solution. In this device, two outlets (O1 and O2) are provided, each subjecting the reaction mixture to a different dilution factor, and each connected to a separate iESI emitter to provide on-line quantitation of analytes present over particular ranges of concentrations.
(64) A solution of L-Arg (100 μM) was prepared in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=2:1), injected at E1 and mixed with an equal amount of solvent (ACN: H2O, v:v=2:1) injected at E2. The same solvent was infused simultaneously at E3 and E4. Samples were collected from outlets 1, 2, (O1, O2), mixed with internal standard L-Arg-13C6 (50 μM) and analyzed by iESI-MS. Based on the off-line calibration curve recorded for L-Arg, the concentrations of L-Arg after dilution were determined. With fixed capillary IDs, angles and positions of the tees, the dilution factor is related to the pressure (hence flow rate) at E1-E4.
(65) The device produced different dilution factors at each outlet, which allows compatibility of samples with different concentrations in one mixture using dilution factors that cause their concentrations to fall to within their linear dynamic ranges for each chosen sprayer (and hence dilution factor) and so optimize quantification by MS. The optimized conditions were found when using a flow rate of 30 μL/min for E1 and E2, 450 μL/min for E3 and E4, they corresponding to 17 times dilution at O1, 255 times dilution at O2. The experiment with optimized conditions was repeated five times and showed 8% variance. The variation between each batch could be reduced by fixing the configuration of the device. O2 has the higher dilution factor which makes it useful for quantitation of concentrated compounds (e.g. reagents at the beginning of a reaction and products at the end of a reaction), while O1 with the lower dilution factor meets the needs of quantitation of less concentrated compounds (products at the beginning and reagents at the end, and trace intermediates or impurities). Volumes were also measured for each sample and flow rates were calculated at each outlet.
(66) The system dead time can be defined as the lag between the status of the bulk-phase reaction and the time of subsequent mass analysis. L-Arg was injected into E1, while solvent (HCN:H2O, v:v=2:1) was added through E2, E3 and E4. The dead time was found to be 20 s at O1, and 30 s at O2, as evaluated by observing the time before the emergence of L-Arg in the full mass scan (shown in form of ion chronogram). The dead time suggests that after switching the emitters 30 s delay is required before collection of data for the next time point.
(67) In the inductive ESI-MS system based on-line reaction quantitative monitoring as shown in
(68) The designed quantitation unit was composed of six junctions: union 1 being used as a valve to control the introduction of reaction solution, mixer 1, 2 and union 2 for mixing of internal standard, formic acid (to remove sodiated product ion, to be discussed later) into the reaction solution and spray solvent, tee 1 is used to split the working solution to the MS inlet and tee 2 for further dilution with spray solvent. Two sprayers were connected with tee 1 and tee 2 and their positions were fixed to allow both spray plume to reach MS inlet. The plume was switched by controlling the valves of sheath gas.
(69) The designed quantitation unit is able to reach fast mixing of reaction solution, IS and dilution solvent. Mixing to what extent decides the dilution factors for each outlet which can influence the accuracy of quantitation. The largest Reynolds Number of this system was 21. In order to disrupt the laminar flow in the capillaries, this system used passive micromixers (two 7-port mixers and one union) which do not require external energy and rely entirely on diffusion or chaotic advection via contacting, decrease of diffusion path, and injection of substreams.
(70) As the reaction mixture/internal standard solution passes through T2-T4 (
(71) L-Arginine and L-arginine-.sup.13C.sub.6 were chosen as the model analyte and IS to evaluate the dilution factors for the two outlets. The pair L-Arg and L-Arg-.sup.13C.sub.6 was found to give a linear dynamic range of 5 nM-500 μM (10.sup.5) in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=2:1) using the SRM transitions (m/z 175.fwdarw.158 and 181.fwdarw.164).
(72) A solution of L-Arg (100 μM) was prepared in ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=2:1), injected at E1 (
(73) The device produced different dilution factors at each outlet, which allows compatibility of samples with different concentrations in one mixture using dilution factors that cause their concentrations to fall to within their linear dynamic ranges for each chosen sprayer (and hence dilution factor) and so optimize quantification by MS. The optimized conditions were found when using a flow rate of 15 μL/min for E1, 300 μL/min for E2 and E3, they corresponding to 18 times dilution at O1, 120 times dilution at O2 and 250 times dilution at O3 (dilution at O1 and O2 are shown by the labelled dots in
(74) The system dead time can be defined as the lag between the status of the bulk-phase reaction and the time of subsequent mass analysis. L-Arg was injected into E1 (
(75) Protonated and sodiated species are commonly observed in electrospray ionization, where the adventitious sodium ions come from the walls of the glass capillary and from traces of salts in the system. Molecules with high proton affinity present only protonated ion forms such as L-Arg, whether in pure solution or in the reaction mixture. For other compounds, however, the binding of a proton or sodium is affected by the presence of other molecules in the system. This can be seen in the MS spectrum of pure dipeptide Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg compared with that of Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg in the reaction mixture. The ratio change of protonated to sodiated ions has little influence in qualitative analysis, but such a change results in the complete failure of analyte quantitation unless there is a knowledge of the proportions of sodiated and protonated species. In such cases, we choose to force the equilibrium in favor of the protonated species by acidifying the solution. Sodiating the product has also been tried but it led to more byproducts being detected in the spectrum.
(76) L-Arg-13C6 was used as internal standard for quantitation of both Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg as well as L-Arg, considering their structural similarities and the convenience of simultaneous quantitation of both analytes in the reaction mixture. A series of Cbz-L-Val-L-Arg solutions with known concentrations (15, 150, 1500, 15000, 150000 μM) and known L-Arg solutions (15, 150, 1500, 15000, 150000 μM) were introduced into the quantitation system separately and mixed with internal standard L-Arg-13C6 (13 mM) at T1, then diluted with ACN: H.sub.2O (v:v=1:1) at T2 and T4 (