boron and 1-hydroxypyrene

boron has been researched along with 1-hydroxypyrene* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for boron and 1-hydroxypyrene

ArticleYear
Oxidation and adduct formation of xenobiotics in a microfluidic electrochemical cell with boron doped diamond electrodes and an integrated passive gradient rotation mixer.
    Lab on a chip, 2016, 10-05, Volume: 16, Issue:20

    Reactive xenobiotic metabolites and their adduct formation with biomolecules such as proteins are important to study as they can be detrimental to human health. Here, we present a microfluidic electrochemical cell with integrated micromixer to study phase I and phase II metabolism as well as protein adduct formation of xenobiotics in a purely instrumental approach. The newly developed microfluidic device enables both the generation of reactive metabolites through electrochemical oxidation and subsequent adduct formation with biomolecules in a chemical microreactor. This allows us to study the detoxification of reactive species with glutathione and to predict potential toxicity of xenobiotics as a result of protein modification. Efficient mixing in microfluidic systems is a slow process due to the typically laminar flow conditions in shallow channels. Therefore, a passive gradient rotation micromixer has been designed that is capable of mixing liquids efficiently in a 790 pL volume within tens of milliseconds. The mixing principle relies on turning the concentration gradient that is initially established by bringing together two streams of liquid, to take advantage of the short diffusion distances in the shallow microchannels of thin-layer flow cells. The mixer is located immediately downstream of the working electrode of an electrochemical cell with integrated boron doped diamond electrodes. In conjunction with mass spectrometry, the two microreactors integrated in a single device provide a powerful tool to study the metabolism and toxicity of xenobiotics, which was demonstrated by the investigation of the model compound 1-hydroxypyrene.

    Topics: Boron; Diamond; Electrochemistry; Electrodes; Lab-On-A-Chip Devices; Oxidation-Reduction; Pyrenes; Rotation; Xenobiotics

2016
Determination of 1-hydroxypyrene in human urine by HPLC with electrochemical detection at a boron-doped diamond film electrode.
    Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry, 2012, Volume: 404, Issue:3

    A high-performance liquid chromatographic method with electrochemical detection (HPLC-ED) at a boron-doped diamond film electrode with preliminary separation and preconcentration by solid-phase extraction (SPE) has been developed for the determination of 1-hydroxypyrene (1-HP) in human urine. 1-HP is among the most widely used biomarkers of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Optimal HPLC-ED conditions have been found: mobile phase methanol-0.05 mol L(-1) phosphate buffer pH 5.0 (80:20, v/v), detection potential +1,000 mV versus Ag/AgCl (3 mol L(-1) KCl), and flow rate 0.8 mL min(-1). For SPE, LiChrolut(®) RP-18 E cartridges were used. The extraction yield was (87.0 ± 5.8)% (n = 5). The concentration dependence of 1-HP was measured in the concentration range from 0.01 to 10 μmol L(-1) (2.18-2,180 μg L(-1)) using methanolic solutions resulting from the SPE pretreatment of spiked human urine samples. The limit of detection (signal-to-noise ratio 3) and the limit of quantification (signal-to-noise ratio 10) of the biomarker were 0.013 μmol L(-1) (2.84 μg L(-1)) and 0.043 μmol L(-1) (9.39 μg L(-1)), respectively, which is sufficient for its determination in the urine of persons exposed to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.

    Topics: Biomarkers; Boron; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Diamond; Electrochemical Techniques; Electrodes; Environmental Exposure; Humans; Limit of Detection; Pyrenes; Signal-To-Noise Ratio; Solid Phase Extraction

2012