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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Electrochemical detection of free 3-nitrotyrosine: application to microdialysis studies.

3-Nitrotyrosine (3-NT) is formed by the reaction of peroxynitrite with either free or protein-bound tyrosine residues and has been proposed as a biomarker of oxidative stress caused by reactive nitrogen species. This study describes the development of an HPLC electrochemical detection assay for free 3-NT capable of measuring this metabolite at the very low (nanomolar) levels encountered physiologically. We employed a dual-cell coulometric approach in which 3-NT is first reduced at an upstream cell to 3-aminotyrosine, which itself is then oxidized at the downstream cell. The method was shown to be linear over the range of 1-500 nM (r = 0.999), with a detection limit (signal/noise ratio of 3) of 0.5 nM (25 fmol on column). Ten consecutive injections of 2 and 20 nM 3-NT standards produced coefficients of variation of 5.88 and 1.87%, respectively. Validation of the identity of the 3-NT peak was confirmed by coelution with authentic standards and by the in vitro production of 3-NT by incubation of 3-morpholinylsydnoneimine (SIN-1, 100 microM), a molecule releasing nitric oxide and superoxide in solution at a pH of 7.0 or higher with tyrosine (10 microM). Using this method, 3-NT was detected in human liver microdialysate (levels up to 2.6 nM), although levels in rat spinal cord dialysate were below the limit of detection.[1]

References

  1. Electrochemical detection of free 3-nitrotyrosine: application to microdialysis studies. Richards, D.A., Silva, M.A., Devall, A.J. Anal. Biochem. (2006) [Pubmed]
 
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