Chemistry Techniques Flashcards
Seperation techniques
Chromatography
Electrophoresis
Detection techniques
colorimetric: spectrophotometry immunoassay: radioimmunoasssay
enzyme-linked immunoassay
What is the purpose of separation techniques
to separate out analyte of interest from a mixture
to check purity of analyte of interest
Stationary phase of chromatography
solid
liquid
Mobile phase in chromatography
Liquid
Gas
Types of chromatography
planar chromatography
column chromatography
KD
Partition or distribution coefficient (Kd): concentration in mobile phase = Kd
concentration in stationary phase
Thin layer chromatography
Principle: differences in adsorption of analytes
Procedure:sampleapplication ,development,detection
Advantages:speed,cost,simplicity
Disadvantages:not quantitative
Phenylketonuria
inherited absence of phenylalanine hydroxylase
inability to convert phenylalanine to tyrosine
phenylalanine therefore accumulates and is toxic to developing brain
lack of tyrosine results in lack of thyroid hormones, catecholamines and melanin
high serum phenylalanine detected by TLC used for screening of PKU
Column chromatography
Principle:
mobile phase passes through stationary phase and analytes separated separation based on differences in charge, size or shape
separated components leave column in eluant and collected
Procedure:
sample application running of column sample collection
Ion exchange chromatography
-Stationary phase is a cation exchange resin
-sample cations displace mobile counterions and are retained on the column
-anionic/neutral solutes are not retained
-flow of mobile phase
Gel exclusion chromatography
-stationary phase is a microporous gel
-small molecules have access to the whole matrix taking longest to pass through the column
-medium sized molecules may have access to the larger pores
-large molecules are totally excluded from the pores,passing rapidly through the column
Affinity chromatography
Complemmatery molecule bound by specific interaction with ligand
-flow of mobile phase
-all other solutes are eluted
Diabetes Mellitus
defective production or action of insulin causes hyperglycaemia
hyperglycaemia responsible for acute symptoms
hyperglycaemia responsible for chronic complications
hyperglycaemia causes excessive glycation of haemoglobin
measurement of glycated haemoglobin by column chromatography used to monitor treatment of diabetes mellitus
Electrophoresis
Separation due to differences in migration of charged molecules in response to an applied electric field
Electrophoretic mobility (μ) is determined by charge to mass ratio:
μ = qE r
q = net molecular charge r = molecular radius
E = field strength