Discrimination of glycoproteins via two‐color laser‐induced fluorescence detection coupled with postcolumn derivatization in capillary electrophoresis
EarlyView Article
- Published: Jul 26, 2013
- Author: Ayumi Tabara, Takashi Kaneta
- Journal: ELECTROPHORESIS
Here, we report a novel method consisting of capillary electrophoretic separation followed by two‐color LIF detection with postcolumn derivatization. The method can be used to discriminate glycoproteins in a protein mixture containing both glycosylated and unglycosylated proteins. The detector permitted simultaneous measurements of two electropherograms obtained by 450 nm (diode laser) and 532 nm (Nd:YAG laser) lasers excited native proteins following postcolumn derivatization with naphthalene‐2,3‐dicarboxaldehyde and concanavalin A (Con A) labeled with tetramethylrhodamine (rhodamine‐labeled Con A), respectively. So, a protein can be assigned as glycosylated if it shows a peak at the same migration time in both electropherograms. According to the proposed principle, in a single run we discriminated a glycosylated protein (thyroglobulin) from an unglycosylated protein (albumin) in the presence of rhodamine‐labeled Con A. Because the methodology permits the simultaneous detection of native proteins and their complexes with a fluorescently labeled probe, it should have broad applicability to binding assays.