Study of metabolic activity of human embryos focused on amino acids by capillary electrophoresis with light-emitting diode-induced fluorescence detection
Language English Country Germany Media print-electronic
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Keywords
- Amino acids, Capillary electrophoresis with light-emitting diode-induced fluorescence detection, Human embryo, Metabolic activity, Naphthalene-2,3-dicarboxaldehyde,
- MeSH
- Amino Acids * analysis metabolism MeSH
- Reproductive Techniques, Assisted MeSH
- Electrophoresis, Capillary methods MeSH
- Embryo, Mammalian metabolism MeSH
- Spectrometry, Fluorescence methods MeSH
- Culture Media analysis chemistry metabolism MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Naphthalenes chemistry MeSH
- Reproducibility of Results MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Names of Substances
- 2,3-naphthalenedicarboxaldehyde MeSH Browser
- Amino Acids * MeSH
- Culture Media MeSH
- Naphthalenes MeSH
Assisted reproduction is a quickly developing field of reproductive medicine whose importance is growing every year due to the increasing number of patients suffering from infertility. As a result, there is a need for the continuous development and/or improvement of assisted reproductive technologies. This paper presents a new method for the in vitro measurement of the amino acid turnover of developing embryos based on capillary electrophoresis with light-emitting diode-induced fluorescence detection. Amino acids were derivatized with naphthalene-2,3-dicarboxaldehyde/NaCN, and the resulting fluorescent derivatives were baseline resolved within 25 min in a background electrolyte comprised of 50 mM sodium tetraborate, 73 mM sodium dodecyl sulphate, 5 mM sodium deoxycholate and 2.5 mM (2-hydroxypropyl)-β-cyclodextrin (pH ≈ 9.3). The migration time and the peak area repeatability (n = 10) were below 0.5 and 4.3%, respectively. The limits of detection ranged from 12.6 nM (histidine) to 39.3 nM (taurine). The developed method, which only requires 2 μL of raw sample, was successfully applied for determining the metabolic activity of human embryos exposed to different environmental stress conditions.
References provided by Crossref.org
Non-Invasive Human Embryo Metabolic Assessment as a Developmental Criterion