Browsing by Author "Maeso Nava, Nuria"
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- Capillary electrophoresis for caffeine and pyroglutamate determination in coffees.
2006-09-19T15:40:36Z In a preliminary study pyroglutamate showed to be over 10 times increased in some lyophilised coffees with respect to brewed or filtered coffees, and probably that increase is related to some stage of the industrial process. Pyroglutamate is known to have a number of remarkable cognitive enhancing effects, which could be also related to the properties of coffee traditionally associated to caffeine. Pyroglutamate improves memory and learning and has anti-anxiety effects in rats. Therefore, a method has been developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of caffeine and pyroglutamate in coffee by capillary electrophoresis. Separation conditions employed MECK conditions with 50 mM borate buffer at pH 9.5 with 130 mM SDS. The applied potential was 10 kV and detection was performed at 200 nm. Afterwards, 10 soluble coffees from the market were measured and caffeine and pyroglutamate levels were compared. Those coffees with higher pyroglutamate with or without caffeine were preliminarily tested for sedative/stimulant properties and cognition enhancing effects in mice. The most relevant finding was a partial reversal of scopolamine-induced amnesia in the passive avoidance paradigm after oral administration of one coffee.
- Capillary electrophoresis of glutathione to monitor oxidative stress and response to antioxidant treatments in an animal model.
2005-09-19T15:40:05Z Glutathione plays a central role in metabolism and antioxidant defence. Several factors can influence the analytical efficiency and rapidity of the quantitative determination of glutathione. Procedures in sample pre-treatment have been compared in order to minimize analytical errors. Capillary electrophoresis has been chosen as a more adequate technique for obtaining a rapid and simple method for glutathione and glutathione disulfide determination in the blood and liver of the rat. The methods, once optimised, have been validated and applied for monitoring the oxidative stress in an animal model, such as the rat made diabetic by streptozotocin injection, when the animals are treated with antioxidants and compared with the corresponding controls.
- Development of a frit-free SPE-based in-column prconcentration system for capillary electrophoresis.
2007-09-19T15:40:29Z An in-capillary sample preconcentration strategy based on solid phase extraction (SPE) technology coupled with capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been developed taking advantage of both techniques (SPE and CE). An in-line frit-free preconcentration device for capillary electrophoresis containing MCX beads, obtained from the corresponding Waters OASIS® cartridges, was prepared. The retention of the particles was based on the relative diameters of the particles, carefully selected, and the capillaries. An experimental preconcentration factor of 100 was found for the system. Conditions were optimised for 3-nitrotyrosine measurement in rat urine being 4.4 M spiked in the urine the lowest value detectable.
- Evolution of oxidative stress parameters and response to oral vitamin E and C administration in streptozotocin diabetic rats.
2008-09-19T15:39:30Z Type I diabetes in humans and streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetes in rats has been associated with oxidative stress, but antioxidant therapy has given contradictory results, in part related to the absence of common conditions used to evaluate in-vivo ant ioxidant properties. This prompted the study of an experimental model of antioxidant therapy in STZ-treated rats. Adult female rats received STZ (SOmgkg1 ) and were studied 7 or 14 days later. Adipose tissue weight progressively decreased with the time of treatment, whereas plasma triglycerides increased at 7 days, before returning to control values at 14 days after STZ treatment. STZ diabetic rats had increased plasma thiobarbituric acid reacting substances and o-tocopherol levels, but the latter variable was decreased when corrected for total lipids. STZ diabetic rats showed a higher GSSG/GSH ratio at Day 14 and lower GSH + GSSG at Day 7 in liver. To evaluate the effect of short-term antioxidant therapy, rats received 5 doses of vitamins C and E over 3 days before being killed on Day 14. Treatment with antioxidants decreased plasma lactic acid and thiobarbituric acid reacting substances, as well as urine 8-isoprostane. and decreased plasma uric acid in controls. Vitamins increased the plasma o:-tocopherol/lipids ratio only in control rats, although the plasma and liver o-tocopherol concentration increased in both groups. STZ diabetic rats showed moderate oxidative stress and treatment with antioxidant vitamins caused a significant change in a selected group of oxidative stress markers, which reflected an improvement in some of the complications associated with this disease. The present experimental conditions can be used as a sensitive experimental model to study the responsiveness of diabetes to other antioxidant interventions.
- Large-volume sample stacking-capillary electrophoresis used ...
2004-09-19T15:39:43Z Large-volume sample stacking using the electroosmotic flow (EOF) pump technique has been investigated for the quantification of 3-nitrotyrosine in urine of diabetic rats. The best separation conditions for these highly complex samples were obtained using capillary electrophoresis (CE) in the reversed polarity mode (i.e., injecting at the cathode and detecting at the anode) using cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) in the running buffer. The optimum CE separation conditions were achieved using a phosphate buffer prepared with 0.15M phosphoric acid and 0.5mM CTAB adjusted to pH 6.4 with sodium hydroxide. In such CE conditions, the limit of detection (LOD) was 1.77 M for 3-nitrotyrosine with normal injection mode, meanwhile with the large-volume sample stacking technique a more than 20-fold improvement was observed (i.e., LOD = 0.08 M was obtained) without noticeable loss of resolution. This value allowed the detection of 3-nitrotyrosine in urine from diabetic rats. To our knowledge, this work is one of the few applications showing the great possibilities of these stacking procedures to analyse biological samples by CE.