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A SYSTEMATIC APPROACH FOR PREVENTING THE LOSS OF HYDROPHOBIC PEPTIDES IN SAMPLE CONTAINERS

Posters | 2019 | WatersInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
Industries
Proteomics
Manufacturer
Waters

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Accurate LC-MS quantitation of proteins and peptides depends on complete recovery throughout sample preparation and storage. Non-specific binding (NSB) to container surfaces can lead to analyte losses, compromised sensitivity, and poor reproducibility. Understanding and preventing these losses is critical for reliable bioanalysis in pharmaceutical development, clinical research, and quality control.

Study Objectives and Overview


This work reviews factors contributing to peptide and protein losses in storage vessels and presents a systematic, three-step workflow to minimize NSB without relying on blocking agents. The approach addresses container selection, solvent composition, and storage conditions to maximize recovery for diverse analyte chemistries.

Instrumental Setup


• LC system: ACQUITY UPLC I-Class with fixed-loop injection
• MS detector: Xevo TQ-S with Universal Source
• Column: CORTECS C18+, 90 Å, 1.6 μm, 2.1 × 50 mm at 55 °C
• Mobile phases: 0.1% formic acid in water (A) and acetonitrile (B)
• Gradient: 15–45% B in 1.2 min, wash at 95% B, re-equilibration
• Injection volume: 10 μL full loop

Methods and Sample Preparation


Peptide standards (desmopressin, teriparatide, glucagon, insulin, melittin) were prepared at 1 ng/mL in 80:20 water/acetonitrile + 0.2% TFA. Solutions were stored in containers with or without 0.1% rat plasma (reference). Variables included container material, solvent composition, storage time, and temperature. Recoveries were calculated by comparing peak areas against plasma-spiked references.

Main Results and Discussion


1. Container Selection
  • Basic peptides adsorb to glass via ionic interactions; avoid glass for proteins and peptides.
  • Hydrophobic peptides adhere strongly to untreated polypropylene; specialized low-binding vessels (e.g., QuanRecovery) greatly improve recoveries.

2. Solvent Optimization
  • Increasing acetonitrile content reduces hydrophobic interactions but can impair chromatographic retention.
  • QuanRecovery plates enabled full recovery of teriparatide at 80:20 water/acetonitrile without affecting LC-MS performance.

3. Storage Conditions
  • Higher temperatures (>10 °C) exacerbate NSB in conventional low-binding plates; recoveries fell by over 20% for melittin and glucagon after 47 hours at room temperature.
  • QuanRecovery vessels maintained >95% peptide recovery even at 25 °C, offering flexible handling.

Benefits and Practical Applications


• Elimination of blocking agents reduces sample complexity and compatibility issues.
• Enhanced sensitivity and reproducibility support trace-level quantitation.
• Workflow is adaptable to diverse peptide chemistries and LC-MS platforms.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Advances in surface coatings and polymer science will yield next-generation low-binding materials with tailored charge and hydrophobicity profiles. Integration with automated sample handling and predictive analytics can further streamline bioanalysis workflows. Green solvent alternatives and miniaturized vessels may reduce waste and support high-throughput screening.

Conclusion


A systematic three-step strategy—container selection, solvent tuning, and storage optimization—prevents hydrophobic peptide losses without blocking agents. Implementing dedicated low-binding vessels ensures reliable LC-MS quantitation across diverse applications.

Reference


1. Jung M.C. Achieving Maximum Protein and Peptide Recovery, Sensitivity, and Reproducibility using QuanRecovery Vials and Plates. Waters White Paper, 720006543EN (2019)
2. Bobaly B., Sipko E., Fekete J. Challenges in liquid chromatographic characterization of proteins. J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci 1032, 3–22 (2016)
3. Rabe M., Verdes D., Seeger S. Understanding protein adsorption phenomena at solid surfaces. Adv Colloid Interface Sci 162, 87–106 (2011)

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