Publications by authors named "Heinisch S"

The online combination of reversed-phase liquid chromatography and supercritical fluid chromatography (online RPLC × SFC) is an attractive technique for the characterization of complex samples containing neutral compounds as the two techniques are highly complementary, especially with a polar stationary phase in supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC). However, the setup is challenging due to the presence of hydro-organic solvents in RPLC, which become injection solvent in SFC. In this study, numerous key experimental parameters were identified and found to have a major effect on peak shape under RPLC × SFC conditions.

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Microalgae are an attractive feedstock for biofuel production thanks to their renewable nature, high growth rate, and ability to use anthropogenic CO. The conversion of microalgae by hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) leads to a solid residue, a gaseous phase, and a biocrude. However, the bio-oil is rich in heteroatoms and requires upgrading processes to be used as biofuels.

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The implementation of ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) in liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) workflows has become a valuable tool for improving compound annotation in metabolomics analyses by increasing peak capacity and by adding a new molecular descriptor, the collision cross section (CCS). Although some studies reported high repeatability and reproducibility of CCS determination and only few studies reported good interplatform agreement for small molecules, standardized protocols are still missing due to the lack of reference CCS values and reference materials. We present a comparison of CCS values of approximatively one hundred lipid species either commercially available or extracted from human plasma.

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Online comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography (online LC x LC) has become increasingly popular. Among the different chromatographic modes that can be combined, hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) and reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) are particularly interesting because they offer a high degree of orthogonality. However, this combination remains complex due to the incompatibility of the solvents in the two dimensions.

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Background: Emerging research suggests that physical activity among children and adolescents decreased during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, a differentiated overview of European youth is lacking. In particular, no systematic analysis has been conducted to date on the impact of heterogeneous pandemic restrictions and school closures within European countries, and with regard to potentially vulnerable groups.

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Introduction: The implementation of COVID-19 pandemic-related restrictions resulted in limitations for physical activity (PA) opportunities, which may have initiated a longer-term behavioural change. The protocol describes the methodology for a planned systematic review that aims to summarise changes in PA and physical fitness (PF) in children and adolescents in the WHO European Region after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods And Analysis: The protocol adheres to the 'Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis for Protocols' (PRISMA-P) statement.

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The aim of the present work is to evaluate the possibilities and limitations of reversed hydrophilic interaction chromatography (revHILIC) mode in liquid chromatography (LC). This chromatographic mode consists of combining a highly polar stationary phase (bare silica) with a gradient varying from very low (1-5%) to high (40%) acetonitrile content (reversed gradient compared to HILIC). The retention behavior of revHILIC was first compared with that of reversed-phase LC (RPLC) and HILIC using representative mixtures of peptides and pharmaceutical compounds.

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Bio-oils obtained by thermochemical or biochemical conversion of biomass represent a promising source of energy to complement fossil fuels, in particular for maritime or air transport for which the use of hydrogen or electricity appears complicated. As these bio-oils are very rich in water and heteroatoms, additional treatments are necessary before they can be used as biofuel. In order to improve the efficiency of these treatments, it is important to have a thorough knowledge of the composition of the bio-oil.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to compare one-dimensional reversed-phase liquid chromatography (1D-RPLC) with comprehensive two-dimensional RPLC (RPLC × RPLC) by examining various quality metrics such as peak capacity and analysis time.
  • Both analysis techniques were tested using small pharmaceuticals and peptides, highlighting that short columns with sub-2-µm particles are optimal for both dimensions in a two-dimensional setup.
  • Results showed that RPLC × RPLC significantly improved peak capacity for analysis times over 5 minutes and could offer better sensitivity compared to 1D-RPLC, despite some challenges with extra-column volume impacting peptide analysis.
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In on-line comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography (LC × LC), the combination of similar chromatographic modes such as reversed-phase liquid chromatography × reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC × RPLC) usually leads to the partial occupation of the available separation space. A possible solution to circumvent this issue may be to dynamically adjust the gradient elution in the second dimension (D) throughout the LC × LC analysis. This allows the gradient elution to be tailored to the elution conditions of each fraction instead of using a conventional full gradient program in which the same gradient profile is repeated for each D-fraction.

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This paper describes an approach to rapidly and easily calculate the linear solvent strength parameters, namely log k and S, under reversed-phase liquid chromatography conditions. This approach, which requires two preliminary gradient experiments to determine the retention parameters, was applied to various representative compounds including small molecules, peptides, and proteins. The retention time prediction errors were compared to the ones obtained with a commercial HPLC modeling software, and a good correlation was found between the values.

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This study details the development of on-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) methods combining cation-exchange chromatography (CEX) and reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) for the separation of the charge variants of a lysine-linked antibody-drug conjugate (ADC). This combination gives an excellent example of the potential benefits of 2D-LC approaches for the analysis of such complex protein formats. CEX is considered the reference technique for the separation of protein charge variants but its retention mechanism usually requires the use of a high concentration of non-volatile salts, which impedes its compatibility with MS detection.

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Pharmaceutical effluents are complex media containing hundreds of compounds including active ingredients, intermediate products and unknown impurities. Bringing an industrial wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) into compliance with European directives requires a thorough analysis of the effluent. In this study, we demonstrate how online comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography (on-line LC × LC) hyphenated to high resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) can be a powerful analytical methodology to monitoring the outlet water, by analysing the content of known molecules while characterizing unknown compounds.

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Article Synopsis
  • Online comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) enhances sample separation capabilities, achieving high peak capacities in shorter analysis times compared to traditional methods.
  • Maximum separation efficiency is attained by using orthogonal separation dimensions, often requiring different mobile and stationary phases.
  • Challenges such as solvent strength mismatch during online transfer can lead to injection effects like peak distortion and broadening, which can be mitigated with various methods discussed in the review.
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Differences in elution strength between the sample solvent and the mobile phase usually give rise to undesirable effects on the chromatographic separation, which may range from slight broadening to severe peak deformation or even splitting. In the most extreme case, the retention factor of the analyte at the head of the column is so small at the time of injection that part of the analyte goes through the column with very little interaction with the stationary phase and hence elutes very close to the column dead time. This phenomenon is known as breakthrough.

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Modern supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is now a well-established technique, especially in the field of pharmaceutical analysis. We recently demonstrated the transferability and the reproducibility of a SFC-UV method for pharmaceutical impurities by means of an inter-laboratory study. However, as this study involved only one brand of SFC instrumentation (Waters®), the present study extends the purpose to multi-instrumentation evaluation.

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Many steps are needed in the synthesis of a new active pharmaceutical ingredient (API). In a practical case proposed by a French pharmaceutical company, an intermediate synthesis step, needed to protect 8 hydroxyl groups before oxidation, could produce a mixture of neutral compounds containing up to 652 structures being positional isomers of 18 molecular formulas. Some mixtures allowed obtaining the desired API, others did not.

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We report on a numerical investigation of the different steps in the development of the spatial concentration profiles developing along the axis of a liquid chromatography column when injecting large relative volumes (>10 to 20% of column volume) of analytes dissolved in a high solvent strength solvent band as can be encountered in the second dimension (D) column of a two-dimensional liquid chromatography (2D-LC) system. More specifically, we made a detailed study of the different retention and the axial band broadening effects leading to the double-headed peak shapes or strongly fronting peaks that can be experimentally observed under certain conditions in 2D-LC. The establishment of these intricate peak profiles is discussed in all its fine, mechanistic details.

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Article Synopsis
  • Two-dimensional liquid chromatography combines hydrophilic interaction (HILIC) and reversed-phase (RPLC) techniques for better separation of ionizable compounds, but developing methods can be challenging due to differing solvent strengths that affect peak shapes.
  • Four strategies to address this issue were compared: (1) flow splitting to reduce the injection volume, (2) on-line dilution with a make-up flow, (3) on-line dilution with Active Solvent Modulation (ASM), and (4) Total Breakthrough Strategy, which injects large volumes of strong solvent.
  • The Total Breakthrough Strategy offered the highest peak capacity, while on-line dilution methods typically resulted in stronger peak intensities, with peak intensities from
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A Quantitative Structure-Retention Relationship (QSRR) model is proposed and aims at increasing the confidence level associated to the identification of organic contaminants by Ultra-High Performance Liquid Chromatography hyphenated to High Resolution Mass Spectrometry (UHPLC-HRMS) in environmental samples under a suspect screening approach. The model was built from a selection of 8 easily accessible physicochemical descriptors, and was validated from a set of 274 organic compounds commonly found in environmental samples. The proposed predictive figure approach is based on the mobile phase composition at solute elution (expressed as % acetonitrile), that has the major advantage of making the model reusable by other laboratories, since the elution composition is independent of both the column geometry and the UHPLC-system.

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In the present work, we have investigated the combination of hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) and reversed phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) for the separation of peptides in on-line HILIC x RPLC. This combination usually leads to significant solvent strength mismatch, since a weak solvent in HILIC becomes a strong solvent in RPLC. This may result in band broadening, peak distortion, and breakthrough phenomena.

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The petroleum industry is increasingly concerned with the conversion of vacuum residues as a consequence of decreased conventional crude oil availability. The compositional analysis of heavy oil products has become a key step in conversion processes, but the complexity of these oil matrices tends to increase with their boiling point. In this study, comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography (LCxLC) coupled to inductively coupled mass spectrometry (ICP-MS/MS) is considered with a view to meet new requirements and to bring additional information regarding the species present in these matrices.

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High-resolution native mass spectrometry (MS) provides accurate mass measurements (within 30 ppm) of intact ADCs and can also yield drug load distribution (DLD) and average drug to antibody ratio (DAR) in parallel with hydrophobic interaction chromatography (HIC). Native MS is furthermore unique in its ability to simultaneously detect covalent and noncovalent species in a mixture and for HIC peak identity assessment offline or online.As an orthogonal method described in this chapter, LC-MS following ADC reduction or IdeS (Fabricator) digestion and reduction can also be used to measure the DLD of light chain and Fd fragments for hinge native cysteine residues such as brentuximab vedotin.

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Article Synopsis
  • ADCs (Antibody-Drug Conjugates) are complex biomolecules that pose challenges in characterization due to variations in antibodies, conjugation methods, manufacturing, and storage.
  • LC × LC (comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography) is a promising technique for ADC analysis, as it offers better separation and increased peak capacity compared to traditional one-dimensional methods.
  • The chapter highlights various chromatographic techniques like HIC, RPLC, SEC, IEX, and HILIC, and their coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry to improve the structural characterization of ADCs.
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Liquid chromatography (LC) coupled with a specific detection such as inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS/MS) is a technique of choice for elementary speciation analysis for complex matrices. The analysis of organic matrices requires the introduction of volatile solvents into the plasma which is an analytical challenge for this coupling technique. Detection sensitivity can be significantly affected by instrumental limitations.

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