Methylation analysis of polysaccharides: Technical advice

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Sims ◽  
Susan Carnachan ◽  
Tracey Bell ◽  
Simon Hinkley

© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Glycosyl linkage (methylation) analysis is used widely for the structural determination of oligo- and poly-saccharides. The procedure involves derivatisation of the individual component sugars of a polysaccharide to partially methylated alditol acetates which are analysed and quantified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The linkage positions for each component sugar can be determined by correctly identifying the partially methylated alditol acetates. Although the methods are well established, there are many technical aspects to this procedure and both careful attention to detail and considerable experience are required to achieve a successful methylation analysis and to correctly interpret the data generated. The aim of this article is to provide the technical details and critical procedural steps necessary for a successful methylation analysis and to assist researchers (a) with interpreting data correctly and (b) in providing the comprehensive data required for reviewers to fully assess the work.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ian Sims ◽  
Susan Carnachan ◽  
Tracey Bell ◽  
Simon Hinkley

© 2018 Elsevier Ltd Glycosyl linkage (methylation) analysis is used widely for the structural determination of oligo- and poly-saccharides. The procedure involves derivatisation of the individual component sugars of a polysaccharide to partially methylated alditol acetates which are analysed and quantified by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The linkage positions for each component sugar can be determined by correctly identifying the partially methylated alditol acetates. Although the methods are well established, there are many technical aspects to this procedure and both careful attention to detail and considerable experience are required to achieve a successful methylation analysis and to correctly interpret the data generated. The aim of this article is to provide the technical details and critical procedural steps necessary for a successful methylation analysis and to assist researchers (a) with interpreting data correctly and (b) in providing the comprehensive data required for reviewers to fully assess the work.


1997 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
pp. 1385-1392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Derbie Asres ◽  
Hélène Perreault

Methylation analysis has been widely used for determination of carbohydrate structures by mass spectrometry. Permethylation of monosaccharides yields mixtures of anomeric pyranosides and furanosides. This paper discusses the influence of some of the permethylation reaction parameters on the proportions of isomeric products obtained. The ratios of three five- and six-membered ring products obtained from two permethylated monosaccharides, D-galactose and L-fucose, have been determined as a function of reaction parameters. The method of Ciucanu and Kerek (1) (methyl iodide in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) in the presence of sodium hydroxide (NaOH)) was used as a starting point. The "conventional" method consists of mixing all of the reagents with the substrate and allowing the reaction to proceed with stirring. Both D-galactose and L-fucose under these conditions produced two main permethylated isomers, a furanoside and a pyranoside, along with two other minor isomeric components. We have investigated the effect on the proportion of products obtained of mixing DMSO, substrate, and NaOH for various times prior to the addition of methyl iodide. Results for D-galactose showed that shorter times enhanced the formation of permethylated furanoside isomers, while reducing the proportion of pyranosides. In other sets of experiments, the time and temperature of reaction, following the addition of methyl iodide, were studied. The indication is that 15 min are sufficient to produce complete methylation, with longer reaction times yielding the same results. Again for D-galactose, low reaction temperatures (ca. 10 °C) favored formation of furanoside products. Higher temperatures yielded higher pyranoside/furanoside ratios. Higher quantities of NaOH also favored formation of the main galactopyranoside product. As for L-fucose, the ratio of the main furanoside vs. pyranoside products obtained by permethylation varied in a way similar to permethylated galactoside. Thus, higher temperatures and longer reaction times favored the main fucopyranoside product. Gentler conditions (i.e., shorter reaction times and lower temperatures) significantly favored the formation of the main fucofuranoside product. These results are interesting as they show the possibility of controlling the relative abundance of permethylated isomers of fucose and galactose. They also constitute a warning to chemists who use methylation procedures in their analyses, to the effect that permethylation products may vary considerably if the reaction conditions are not carefully controlled. Keywords: glucose, galactose, fucose, TLC, GC–MS, permethylation, monosaccharides.


1980 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 594-600 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Bammert ◽  
M. Rautenberg ◽  
W. Wittekindt

An important task in the design of turbo machinery is the determination of the aerothermodynamic parameters necessary to assure optimum matching of the individual compressor components. With centrifugal compressors, the problem is to design impeller and diffuser such that a maximum overall efficiency is achieved for the desired design point. For this purpose, a mathematical model is developed coupling the individual component efficiencies. In the first part of this paper, the aerothermodynamic bases are derived and the coupling equation is illustrated. In the second part, a solution is displayed for the complex problem of matching the impeller and the vaneless diffuser of a centrifugal compressor. The solution is obtained by means of a stochastic-mathematical optimization procedure based on the biological evolution strategy.


1961 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 434-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric E. Ungar

A simple semigraphical method for calculating the natural frequencies of two-plate systems is developed, a two-plate system being one made up of two rectangular plates simply supported at all edges and joined at a common edge. Charts for easy determination of the afore-mentioned natural frequencies are developed. One of these gives, as a by-product, the natural frequencies of rectangular plates (of any dimensions) having one edge clamped, the remaining three simply supported. It is demonstrated that the higher natural frequencies of two-plate systems are very nearly equal to those of the individual component plates. Equations for the mode shapes are also given.


1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 1019-1022 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. O. Aspinall ◽  
I. W. Cottrell

An arabinan and the previously characterized arabinogalactan and acidic polysaccharide complex have been isolated by extraction of defatted and deproteinized soybean cotyledon meal with water. Methylation analysis involving gas chromatography – mass spectrometry of methylated alditol acetates formed from the methylated arabinan has shown that the parent polysaccharide is highly branched and of the same structural type as other arabinans associated with pectins. Methylated derivatives of mustard seed and lemon-peel arabinans and of soybean arabinogalactan have been similarly analyzed.


Author(s):  
NK Meruva ◽  
MT Smith ◽  
SE Plunkett

AbstractA method for the determination of menthol in a single puff of mainstream cigarette smoke is reported. A rotary smoking machine with a twin filter interface was used to smoke cigarettes with varying menthol and “tar” deliveries determined based on the Cambridge filter method. The twin filter interface mechanically switches to a new filter pad for collection of smoke from each cigarette puff. The individual filter pad extracts were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) to determine menthol puff-by-puff deliveries. Menthol puff-by-puff profiles show an increase in menthol smoke delivery with increasing puff count, a trend consistent with total particulate matter and smoke delivery profiles of other mainstream smoke constituents. The sum of single puff menthol deliveries is comparable to the whole cigarette menthol smoke delivery as collected on a single filter pad. This method can also determine quantitative puff-by-puff deliveries of other mainstream cigarette smoke constituents.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Imad Osman Abu Reid ◽  
Hind Mohamed Farid ◽  
Sara Osman Eltayeb

Abstract Background Simultaneous spectrophotometric determination of samples containing more than one analyte presents analytical challenge; the choice of an analytical procedure is strictly related to the extent of overlapping between the individual absorption peaks of these components; if the absorption peaks are satisfactorily resolved, the determination is not problematic, but if the individual component signals are partly or totally overlapped, then powerful techniques are needed. Combined amlodipine and atorvastatin are typical example where special techniques are needed to resolve bands overlapping. Results Application of multiwavelength regression and absorbance factor methods to the analysis of atorvastatin and amlodipine combination proved to be satisfactorily capable of accurate and precise determination of the two analytes. The two methods recoveries were very close to the expected analytes concentrations, and the precision of the methods was < 2% relative standard deviation. Statistical comparison indicated that there is no significant difference between the assay results obtained by the two method as the calculated t values 0.91 and 1.13 for amlodipine and atorvastatin, respectively, were less than the tabulated t value 2.23 at 95% confidence level. Conclusion The proposed methods are accurate, precise, simple and inexpensive. They can be applied successfully to the analysis of the two drugs in combined dosage form.


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