1. [Untitled]
- Author
-
Emmie Dumont, Cyrille C. Chéry, Rita Cornelis, Koen De Cremer, and Luc Moens
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Resolution (mass spectrometry) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Ultrafiltration ,Native Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis ,Vanadium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Biochemistry ,Analytical Chemistry ,Electrophoresis ,Speciation ,chemistry ,Transferrin ,Vanadate ,media_common - Abstract
Slab-gel electrophoresis has been applied to the speciation of vanadium in serum. The electrophoresis separation is an adaptation of the blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separation necessary to ensure the stability of the vanadium-protein complex; Coomassie blue was used to shift the charges of the proteins and to stabilize the vanadium complex. The detection of the vanadium species was made possible by the use of the (48)V radiotracer and the phosphor-screen technology. The method was first developed using transferrin, incubated with (48)V, as a model. After it was proved that the vanadium-transferrin complex was stable during separation, the method was validated by separating serum incubated with (48)V. The efficiency of the separation was assessed according to two parameters: resolution and conservation of the species. First, the resolution of the separation was as expected from a native separation. Second, the release of free vanadium from the transferrin complex, which was the main vanadium species expected, was negligible, which proves that the species remain intact during separation. In accordance with the literature, it was found that vanadium binds to transferrin in incubated serum at these low concentrations.
- Published
- 2002