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Protein Precipitation for Biological Fluid Samples Using Agilent Captiva EMR—Lipid 96-Well Plates

Applications | 2018 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Sample Preparation, Consumables, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Protein precipitation is a foundational sample preparation technique in LC/MS/MS analysis of biological fluids. It achieves rapid and cost-effective removal of proteins from complex matrices, facilitating high-throughput workflows. The integration of lipid sorbents enables simultaneous removal of both proteins and lipids, improving data quality and instrument robustness.

Study Objectives and Overview


This application note outlines critical parameters for in-well protein precipitation using Agilent Captiva EMR—Lipid 96-well plates. Key focus areas include selection of crashing solvent and ratio, use of additives, order of sample and solvent addition, internal standard incorporation, and mixing strategies. A comparative study evaluates traditional centrifugation-based PPT against the integrated EMR—Lipid cleanup in terms of workflow efficiency and instrument impact.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Selection of Crashing Solvent and Ratio


  • Acetonitrile (ACN) at a minimum ratio of 3 to 1 solvent to sample yields clear supernatants and efficient protein removal
  • Methanol (MeOH) generates finer precipitates, requiring higher pressures for filtration. MeOH percentages should not exceed 15 to balance analyte extraction and precipitate characteristics

Additives


  • Formic acid 1 percent or ammonium hydroxide 1 percent can modulate protein binding; acidified solvents may extract hemoglobin in whole blood, leading to colored supernatants

Sample and Internal Standard Addition


  • Add the biological sample first to the EMR—Lipid plate, followed by the internal standard, then the crashing solvent to ensure homogeneous mixing and stable equilibration

Mixing Strategies


  • For volumes up to 500 microliters, vortexing at 1350 rpm for one to two minutes is recommended
  • For larger volumes, allow a five-minute passive mix or use pipette mixing with wide bore tips to avoid tip clogging

Filtration and Elution


  • Filtration can be performed by low-speed centrifugation, positive pressure, or vacuum within a 96-well format
  • Primary elution at one drop per three to five seconds, optionally followed by secondary elution with eighty twenty ACN water to maximize recovery

Instrumentation


  • Captiva EMR—Lipid 96-well plates and Captiva one mL collection plates
  • Multitube vortexer, centrifuge, positive pressure manifolds, vacuum manifolds, and LC MS MS system

Main Results and Discussion


  • A three to one ACN sample to solvent ratio produced clear supernatants immediately and after twenty four hours at ten degrees C, outperforming MeOH-based PPT
  • Adding crashing solvent to the sample improved mixing homogeneity and reduced unprecipitated residues compared to the reverse order
  • Integrated EMR—Lipid cleanup removed over ninety nine percent of phospholipids, significantly lowering matrix ion suppression
  • Workflow comparison showed a thirty percent reduction in sample preparation time and at least ten percent savings in instrument runtime and solvent use

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Streamlined workflow with in-well processing and elimination of transfer steps reduces cross-contamination risk
  • Simultaneous protein and lipid removal enhances method reliability and reproducibility
  • Cleaner samples decrease instrument maintenance and downtime, supporting higher throughput

Future Trends and Opportunities


  • Further automation and integration with robotic platforms for large-scale studies
  • Development of novel sorbent chemistries for expanded metabolite coverage
  • Miniaturization and adaptation for microflow and nanoflow LC MS MS systems
  • Implementation of green solvents and sustainable workflows

Conclusion


In-well PPT using Captiva EMR—Lipid plates offers an efficient, high-throughput sample preparation approach for biofluids. Optimal solvent selection, additive use, and mixing protocols are critical to maximizing recovery and cleanliness. The integrated cleanup not only streamlines laboratory workflows but also extends instrument performance by minimizing matrix-related contamination.

References


  1. Polson A et al Optimization of protein precipitation based upon effectiveness of protein removal and ionization effect in liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry Journal of Chromatography B 2003 785(2) 263 275
  2. Grant R Solutions Based Extraction Techniques Presentation ASMS Fall Workshop 2016
  3. Zhao L Lucas D Sample Preparation by Captiva EMR—Lipid Plates Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991 8006EN 2017
  4. Lucas D Zhao L Advanced in well protein precipitation for blood samples Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991 7956EN 2017
  5. Stevens J Zhao L High Throughput PPT and Lipid Cleanup Workflow Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991 8635EN 2017
  6. Zhao L Lucas D Optimizing Secondary Elution for Phospholipid Removal Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991 8007EN 2017

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