Determination of δ-[ L -α-aminoadipyl]- L -cysteinyl- D -valine in cell extracts of Penicillium chrysogenum using ion pair-RP-UPLC-MS/MS

Journal Article (2012)
Author(s)

R. Maleki Seifar (TU Delft - OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering)

A.T. Deshmukh (TU Delft - OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering)

J.J. Heijnen (TU Delft - OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering)

W.M. van Gulik (TU Delft - OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering)

Research Group
OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.201100527
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2012
Language
English
Research Group
OLD BT/Cell Systems Engineering
Issue number
2
Volume number
35
Pages (from-to)
225-230

Abstract

δ-[L-α-Aminoadipyl]-L-cysteinyl-D-valine (ACV) is a key intermediate in the biosynthesis pathway of penicillins and cephalosporins. Therefore, the accurate quantification of ACV is relevant, e.g. for kinetic studies on the production of these β-lactam antibiotics. However, accurate quantification of ACV is a challenge, because it is an active thiol compound which, upon exposure to air, can easily react with other thiol compounds to form oxidized disulfides. We have found that, during exposure to air, the oxidation of ACV occurs both in aqueous standard solutions as well as in biological samples. Qualitative and quantitative determinations of ACV and the oxidized dimer bis-δ-[L-α-aminoadipyl]-L-cysteinyl-D-valine have been carried out using ion pair reversed-phase ultra high-performance liquid chromatography, hyphenated with tandem mass spectrometry (IP-RP-UPLC-MS/MS) as the analytical platform. We show that by application of tris(2-carboxy-ethyl)phosphine hydrochloride (TCEP) as the reducing reagent, the total amount of ACV can be determined, while using maleimide as derivatizing reagent enables to quantify the free reduced form only.

No files available

Metadata only record. There are no files for this record.