4.7 Article

Interfaces for capillary LC with ICPMS detection: A comparison of nebulizers/spray chamber configurations

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANALYTICAL ATOMIC SPECTROMETRY
Volume 24, Issue 4, Pages 528-534

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/b820121h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE 0602413]
  2. MPS/CHE
  3. BIO/IDBR

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Three nebulizer and four spray chamber configurations were evaluated to develop a selective and sensitive capillary interface to analyze phosphorothioate oligonucleotides by ICPMS. Nebulizers consisted of two of the most common low flow nebulizer designs, concentric and micro-concentric. Spray chambers utilized were a Scott chamber, a Cinnabar chamber, and two single pass configurations, all with different internal volumes. The influence of nebulizer designs and spray chamber volumes were determined by peak width measurements through flow injections made with and without the capillary column. This study capitalizes on the element specific detection abilities of ICPMS by elucidating phosphorus and sulfur in the phosphorothioate linkage of the 24 mer oligonucleotide by monitoring (31)P(+) and (32)S(+). Comparisons of nebulizer/spray chamber responses were based upon absolute sensitivity for the 24 mer oligonucleotide. Micro-flow injection analysis generated absolute detection limits of (31)P and (32)S of 0.17 pg and 0.16 pg, respectively, corresponding to 16 fmol of 24 mer oligonucleotide injected. This is the first record of a phosphorothioate oligonucleotide being quantitatively detected by ICPMS and the subsequent evaluation of low flow capillary nebulizer/spray chamber configurations optimized for its analysis.

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