Field-amplified sample stacking cyclodextrin modified capillary electrophoresis for quantitative determination of diastereomeric saponins
Date
2014
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Article
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Oxford University Press
Oxford University Press
Series Info
Journal of Chromatographic Science
52
52
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
Successful simultaneous diastereomeric separation and sensitive determination of two pairs of triterpenoidal saponins have been achieved by capillary electrophoresis (CE) using ?-cyclodextrin (?-CD) as a stereoselective agent to cooperate with borate complexation. A usual technique for isolation and group separation of saponins was developed as an appropriate purification step prior to the determination of individual saponins by CE. Soyasaponin I (S1), azukisaponin V (S2), bersimoside I (S3) and bersimoside II (S4) could be well separated within 14 min in a fused-silica capillary (60 cm long to the detector with an additional 10 cm to the cathode; 75 ?m i.d.). The background electrolyte was borate buffer (80 mM, pH 10), containing 24 mM ?-CD. The separation voltage was 14 kV with a detection wavelength of 195 nm. The sample was electrokinetically injected using a voltage of 16 kV for 12 s. Methanol (70%) was used as the diluent for field-amplified sample stacking after hydrodynamic injection of short water plug (5 cm, 4 s). The method was partially validated for linearity, repeatability, reproducibility, limits of detection and limits of quantification. The correlation coefficients of the calibration curves were all >0.998, and the recoveries were from 98.23 to 96.21%. The Author [2013]. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Description
Scopus
Keywords
October University for Modern Sciences and Arts, جامعة أكتوبر للعلوم الحديثة والآداب, University of Modern Sciences and Arts, MSA University, beta cyclodextrin derivative, boric acid, plant extract, saponin, capillary electrophoresis, chemistry, clover, limit of detection, pH, plant seed, procedures, reproducibility, statistical model, beta-Cyclodextrins, Borates, Electrophoresis, Capillary, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Limit of Detection, Linear Models, Plant Extracts, Reproducibility of Results, Saponins, Seeds, Trifolium