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HomeGas Chromatography (GC)The Derivatization and Analysis of Amino Acids by GC-MS

The Derivatization and Analysis of Amino Acids by GC-MS

Katherine K. Stenerson

Reporter US Volume 25.3

Introduction

Typically, high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) is used for the analysis of amino acids. However, GC can also be used, and in some cases availability of instrumentation or operation costs can make it a better choice. The polar nature of amino acids requires derivatization prior to GC analysis. The goal of derivatization is to make an analyte more volatile, less reactive, and thus improve its chromatographic behavior. In the case of amino acids, derivatization replaces active hydrogens on OH, NH2, and SH polar functional groups with a nonpolar moiety.

Silylation is a very common derivatization technique, and is useful for a wide variety of compounds. The main disadvantage of this method is its sensitivity to moisture. The presence of moisture results in poor reaction yield and instability of the derivatized analytes. For this study, we evaluated the use of the silylation reagent N-tert-butyldimethylsilyl- N-methyltrifluoroacetamide (MTBSTFA) for the derivatization of amino acids. MTBSTFA, forms tert-butyl dimethylsilyl (TBDMS) derivatives when reacted with polar functional groups containing an active hydrogen:

Chemical reaction diagram illustrating the synthesis of MTBSTFA with an alcohol (R-OH) reacting with a silylation reagent containing silicon, fluorine, oxygen, and methyl groups to form N-Methyl-N-(tert-butyldimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide.

Figure 1. Structure of MTBSTFA

MTBSTFA derivatives are more stable and less moisture sensitive than those formed using lower molecular weight reagents such as N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (BSTFA) (1).

Experimental

A 50 μL aliquot of a solution containing a mix of L-amino acids at 91 μg/mL in 0.1 N HCl was dried, and 100 μL of neat MTBSTFA, followed by 100 μL of acetonitrile, were added. The mixture was heated at 100 °C for 4 hours. The sample was then neutralized with sodium bicarbonate and subjected to GC-MS analysis on a 20 m x 0.18 mm I.D. x 0.18 μm SLB™-5ms capillary column.

Results

A chromatogram of the TBDMS derivatives of the amino acids is presented in Figure 2. Spectral data obtained from the peaks helped in identification of the amino acid derivatives. Replacement of an active hydrogen with a TBDMS group adds 114 to the molecular weight. Electron impact spectra (2) of these derivatives contains typical fragments corresponding to the molecular weight of the derivative less CH3 (M-15), C4H9 (M-57), C4H9 + CO (M-85), and CO-O-TBDMS (M-159). Figure 3 shows an example of this fragmentation pattern in the spectrum of TBDMS-valine.

Mass spectrometry chromatogram displaying multiple peaks with corresponding mass-to-charge ratios over a retention time from 0 to 25 minutes. Conditions such as column type SLB-5ms and MSD interface temperature are listed on the left side.

Figure 2. GC-MS Analysis of Amino Acid Derivatives on the SLB-5ms (28564-U)

A mass spectrum graph showing various peaks with labels indicating their mass-to-charge ratio values and fragment identifiers. The highest peak is marked as ‘286 M+’ indicating the molecular ion peak. The x-axis ranges from 50 to 650 m/z, and the y-axis represents abundance in thousands of counts per second (c.p.s.), ranging from 0 to 16.

Figure 3. Mass Spectrum of TBDMS Derivative of Valine (MW of the derivative = 345)

Under the reaction conditions used, the majority of the amino acids produced one derivative, with active hydrogens on hydroxyl, amine, and thiol groups (in the case of cysteine) replaced by TBDMS. Some amino acids produced multiple derivatives, specifically asparagine, glutamine, and tryptophan. In the case of these amino acids, a modification in the reaction conditions, such as, lowering the temperature or changing the reaction time, may prevent this from occurring (3). For example, increasing the reaction time from 2 to 4 hours resulted in an increased response of the fully derivatized form of tryptophan.

While TBDMS derivatives are more stable than traditional TMS derivatives, their higher molecular weights result in longer elution times during GC analysis. To balance this, the separation was done on a short, narrow bore capillary column. A starting temperature no higher than 100 °C was necessary to maintain resolution of the glycine derivative peak from the solvent. A quick ramp to 360 °C after the elution of the cystine derivative was performed to ensure the column was clean for subsequent analyses.

Conclusion

This study demonstrates that with the proper use of derivatization reagents such as MTBSTFA, amino acids can be analyzed by GC-MS. The reaction conditions may have to be “tweaked” to produce maximum response of the derivatives of interest. The derivatives produce characteristic fragments, allowing for easy identification by MS. To reduce the overall GC analysis time of these derivatives, a short, narrow bore column such as the 20 m x 0.18 mm I.D. x 0.18 μm SLB-5ms is recommended.

References

1.
Sobolevsky TG, Revelsky AI, Miller B, Oriedo V, Chernetsova ES, Revelsky IA. 2003. Comparison of silylation and esterification/acylation procedures in GC-MS analysis of amino acids. J. Sep. Science. 26(17):1474-1478. https://doi.org/10.1002/jssc.200301492
2.
Kitson FG, Larsen BS, McEwen CN. Gas Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry, A Practical Guide; Academic Press: San Diego, 1996; Chapter 9..
3.
Molnár-Perl I, Katona ZF. 2000. GC-MS of amino acids as their trimethylsilyl/t-butyldimethylsilyl Derivatives: In model solutions III. Chromatographia. 51(1):S228-S236. https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02492811
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