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

Identification and quantitation of N-acetyl metabolites of biogenic amines in the thoracic nervous system of the locust, Schistocerca gregaria, by gas chromatography-negative-ion chemical ionisation mass spectrometry.

The N-acetylated metabolites of p-tyramine, p-octopamine and dopamine were identified unambiguously and quantitatively determined in a single ventral thoracic nerve cord of the locust, Schistocerca gregaria, by gas chromatography-negative-ion chemical ionisation mass spectrometry (GC-NICIMS). Deuterium-labelled analogues of each compound were added to a single ventral thoracic nerve cord in acetonitrile: the tissue was homogenised and the suspension centrifuged. The solvent was removed from the supernatant and the resultant residue was derivatised with trifluoroacetic anhydride. Under negative-ion chemical ionisation conditions, the trifluoroacetyl derivatives produced ions which were sufficiently abundant to be suitable for selected-ion monitoring. This method is highly specific and gave a limit of detection below the picogram levels. N-Acetyl-5-hydroxytryptamine was determined using a previously published GC-NICIMS technique [S.P. Markey, R.W. Colburn and J.N. Johannessen, Biomed. Mass Spectrom., 7 (1981) 301]. The concentrations of N-acetyltyramine, N-acetyloctopamine, N-acetyldopamine and N-acetyl-5-hydroxytryptamine in locust thoracic nerve cords were, respectively, 1.86 +/- 0.71, 1.13 +/- 0.34, 6.77 +/- 8.48 and 0.07 +/- 0.02 ng per tissue.[1]

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