AI Article Synopsis

  • Capillary electrophoresis was used for protein profiling of maize extracts, comparing various types of modified capillaries and their effectiveness in separating zeins.
  • The study determined that the polyacrylamide-coated capillary was the most stable and efficient for zein separation.
  • Differences in zein content were observed when comparing transgenic and nontransgenic maize, with genetically modified samples showing additional peaks in the albumin fraction.

Article Abstract

In this work, capillary electrophoresis was applied to protein profiling of fractionated extracts of maize. A comparative study on the application of uncoated fused-silica capillaries and capillaries modified with hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, ω-iodoalkylammonium salt and a commercially available neutral capillary covalently coated with polyacrylamide is presented. The coating stability, background electrolyte composition, and separation efficiency were investigated. It was found that for zeins separation, the most stable and efficient was the capillary coated with polyacrylamide. Finally, the usefulness of these methods was studied for the differentiation of zein fraction in transgenic and nontransgenic maize. Zeins extracted from maize standards containing 0 and 5% m/m genetic modification were successfully separated, but slight differences were observed in terms of the zein content. Albumin and globulin fractions were analyzed with the use of unmodified fused-silica capillary with borate buffer pH 9 and the capillary coated with polyacrylamide with phosphate buffer pH 3. In the albumin fraction, additional peaks were found in genetically modified samples.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jssc.201301236DOI Listing

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