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UF-Amino Station LC/MS Ultra Fast Amino Acid Analysis System (Part 2) - Improved Sample Analysis Reliability

Applications | 2014 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
HPLC, LC/MS
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
Shimadzu

Summary

Significance of the topic


The reliable quantification of amino acids in complex food and biological samples is vital for nutritional analysis, clinical diagnostics, and quality control. Traditional reversed‐phase HPLC with pre‐column derivatization often suffers from coelution of contaminants and limited selectivity of UV detection, leading to compromised accuracy in matrices such as milk, plasma, or culture media.

Objectives and overview of the study


This Application News introduces the UF‐Amino Station, a dedicated LC/MS‐based amino acid analysis system designed to accelerate throughput and enhance quantitative reliability. The note compares performance against conventional UHPLC‐UV methods in skim milk, evaluates recovery in spiked samples, and demonstrates applicability to serum‐free culture medium and rat plasma.

Methodology and instrumentation


The UF‐Amino Station combines automated phenyl isothiocyanate (PITC) derivatization via the SIL‐20AC PT autosampler with LC/MS detection. Key analytical conditions include:
  • Column: Shim-pack XR-ODS, 100 × 3.0 mm I.D., 2.6 μm
  • Mobile phases: 0.1 M phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) and acetonitrile, gradient elution
  • Flow rate: 0.9 mL/min; Column temperature: 40 °C
  • Derivatization reagent: Phenyl isothiocyanate (PITC)
  • Detection: LC/MS with individual mass channels for each amino acid

Main results and discussion


Comparison with UHPLC-UV (Fig. 1): The UF-Amino Station achieved baseline separation of 20+ amino acids in skim milk, eliminating overlapping peaks observed under UV detection at identical runtimes. Automated derivatization and MS detection isolated each analyte in its own extracted ion chromatogram, suppressing matrix interference.

Recovery in skim milk (Fig. 2): Spiked samples showed average recoveries within 95–105 %, underscoring quantitative accuracy even in highly complex dairy matrices.

Biological sample analysis (Fig. 3): Amino acid profiles in a serum-free culture medium and rat plasma exhibited clear separation without interference, confirming the system’s suitability for clinical and metabolomic studies.

Benefits and practical applications


  • High selectivity: Mass detection prevents peak overlap and coelution errors.
  • Improved throughput: Automated sample derivatization boosts lab efficiency.
  • Enhanced precision: Reproducible derivatization and stable MS response.
  • Wide applicability: Robust performance in food matrices, cell culture media, and biological fluids.

Future trends and possibilities


Advances may include integration of high-resolution MS for isobaric discrimination, further miniaturization of sample preparation, and expanded panels for metabolomic profiling. Coupling the UF-Amino Station with laboratory information management systems (LIMS) could streamline high‐throughput QA/QC workflows and support biomarker discovery.

Conclusion


The UF-Amino Station represents a significant improvement over conventional UV‐based amino acid analysis, delivering rapid, selective, and accurate quantification across diverse complex matrices. Its automated derivatization and LC/MS detection make it a powerful tool for research, clinical, and industrial applications.

References


  • Shimadzu Application News No. L434, UF-Amino Station LC/MS Ultra Fast Amino Acid Analysis System (Part 2).
  • Shimadzu Application News No. L433, Automated Precolumn Derivatization with SIL-20AC PT Autosampler.

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