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- Posts: 4
- Joined: Sun Jul 03, 2011 11:57 pm
I'm having some problems with my HPLC protocol...
The idea behind it is to reduce cystine with TCEP to its monomers cystein and derivate it with monobromobimane.
The protocol I started with was terrible and so I changed a lot and it looked good so far, but then I decided to change the internal standard from N-acetylcysteine to cysteamine, what comes out much closer to my cysteine peak. When I tried to seperate the early eluting peaks with adding a gradient at the beginning, I suddenly had a splitted peak for my cysteine. On the first runs it wasnt really a split peak. It looked more than two different peaks.
By adjusting the gradient I almost managed to flush both of them out simultaneously, but I'm writing this here now under sample preparation because its not a HPLC problem (even if I try to solve it by adjusting the gradient) but a problem with the sample preparation. Because only this peak is splitted, there is a strong evidence to suggest that during my sample preparation really two slightly different products are generated.
Thats what it looked liked in the beginning:

with peak 1: rubbish peak 2: internal standard peak 3,4: cysteine, rest:rubbish
after adjustments:

(i know I let the column not enough time to re-equibrilate but I wanted to do it fast)
And thats my actual sample preparation:
50µl sample in PBS buffer
10µl cysteamine 0.05mM
6µl TCEP 5mM adjusted to pH 7
30 min incubation 37C
20µl Monobromobimane 3mM in acetonitril
20 min incubation at RT in the dark
20µ acetic acid 10%
Any Ideas what could happen in my assay?
Thank you so much!
Friede
