Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters

Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 414(17): 4809-4819, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35583681

ABSTRACT

Fractionation of essential oils is technically challenging due to enormous scaffold diversities and structural complexities as well as difficulties in the implementation of the fractionation in the gas phase. Packing beads with multi-dimensional hierarchical nanostructures have been developed herein to pack fractional columns for atmospheric distillations. Activated alumina beads were coated with a porous TiO2 thin film. Growth of Cu-BTC (benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylate) crystals in resultant porous surfaces leads to the generation of new nanopores and increased metal centers for differential coordination with diverse components of essential oils. The TiO2 thin film is not only an integral part of the composites but also induces the oriented growth of Cu-BTC metal organic framework (MOF) crystals through coordinative interactions. These Al2O3@TiO2@Cu-BTC MOF beads show very strong absorptive capability for major components of essential oils, except for a single cyclic ether eucalyptol with steric hindrances. The eucalyptol was fractionated by using the column packed with those modified alumina beads from raw materials of Artemisia argyi, and Rosmarinus officinalis with high purities up to 96% and 93%, respectively.


Subject(s)
Metal-Organic Frameworks , Oils, Volatile , Aluminum Oxide , Eucalyptol , Metal-Organic Frameworks/chemistry , Plant Oils , Porosity , Titanium
2.
Anal Chem ; 81(12): 5080-7, 2009 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19518149

ABSTRACT

Fatty acids covalently bonded with other molecules have been implicated in many important biological processes. We describe here a rapid approach termed isotope-coded fatty acid transmethylation (iFAT) that integrates extraction, transmethylation, and isotopic labeling into a single step with the aid of ultrasonic irradiation for comparative analysis of fatty acids by mass spectrometry. In this approach, samples without any prefractionation were mixed with a methanol solution of 0.5 M NaOH and an n-hexane solution. The intense wave shocks and cavitations generated by ultrasonic irradiation not only speed the alkaline-catalyzed transmethylation reaction but also facilitate the simultaneous mass transfer of fatty acid methyl esters into the top n-hexane extraction phase that was injected into a GC/MS system. By using commercially available d(3)-methanol, we were able to compare the intensity of labeled and unlabeled methyl esters and their corresponding fragment ions. The detection limit can be down to the picogram level. Major advantages of the iFAT strategy are summarized in the following: (1) Efficient heterogeneous reactions. Solid samples such as dried cell lysates or detergent-resistant fractions can be readily transformed and analyzed with the aid of ultrasound irradiation. (2) Accurate quantification of fatty acids. Evaluation of the completeness or losses of transformation reactions across lipid classes has been hampered due to a lack of suitable methods. Isotope labeling can be used as an internal standard for accurate comparison of the fatty acid composition in different cell states. (3) Reduced interferences from complex biological context. The iFAT strategy not only differentially labels fatty acids in different samples, but also volatilizes those molecules, and thus, they are isolated from the bulk background and analyzed by GC/MS. This proposed approach has been applied to quantitatively determine the fatty acid composition in plant oil and in budding yeast cell lysates and detergent-resistant fractions. It should provide a widely applicable means for quantitative comparison of the fatty acid composition in cells and tissues.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids/chemistry , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Fatty Acids/analysis , Isotope Labeling , Methylation , Sonication
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL