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Precision Microvolume Spectrophotometry of Lysosyme at 100mg/ml

Applications | 2005 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
NIR Spectroscopy, UV–VIS spectrophotometry
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Microvolume spectrophotometry addresses the challenge of accurately measuring absorbance in highly concentrated protein solutions when only microliter volumes are available. By reducing pathlength and sample volume, this technique enables precise analysis of samples previously beyond the dynamic range of conventional cuvette-based spectrophotometers, supporting research in protein chemistry, biopharmaceutical development, and quality control.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a novel 0.2 mm pathlength Hellma Traycell integrated with a Varian Cary 6000i spectrophotometer for quantifying lysozyme at 100 mg/ml in 1 µl volumes. It examined the instrument’s noise floor, linearity, dynamic range, and ability to reveal unexpected absorbance phenomena in concentrated protein solutions.

Instrumentation


A Cary 6000i UV/Vis spectrophotometer (compatible with Cary 4000) equipped with manual and automated rear beam attenuators was used. A modified 1 cm cell holder secured a Hellma Traycell microvolume cuvette, achieving pathlength precision and low noise.

Methodology


A 100 mg/ml lysozyme solution in deionized water was scanned from 200 to 380 nm using a 2 nm bandwidth, 60 nm/min scan rate, 2 s averaging time, and 2 nm data intervals. Rear beam attenuation was set to offset Traycell internal absorption.

Main Results and Discussion


The system exhibited noise as low as 0.0002 Abs, enabling detection down to 100 µg/ml protein or ~4 ng DNA in 1 µl. Contrary to expectations, instead of a sharp peak at 280 nm, highly concentrated lysozyme produced a broad plateau at ~2 Abs. This reproducible anomaly suggests altered molecular association or bond distortion in dense protein solutions.

Benefits and Practical Applications

  • Extends quantitation range from 20 µg/ml to 100 mg/ml in microliter volumes.
  • Reduces sample consumption by >1,000-fold compared to standard cuvettes.
  • Enables purity scans and kinetic measurements at high concentrations.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Further work should explore precision dilution series, variable pathlength studies, and the behavior of other biomolecules under extreme concentration. Advances in microvolume optics and software automation will expand applications in protein aggregation studies, drug formulation screening, and rapid clinical diagnostics.

Conclusion


The integration of a Hellma Traycell with a Cary 6000i spectrophotometer offers a reliable approach for microvolume analysis of highly concentrated proteins. The unexpected absorbance plateau observed in lysozyme highlights the importance of direct measurement over extrapolation from dilute samples and opens new avenues for investigating molecular interactions at high solute concentrations.

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