ion-selectivity
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The aim of the present study was to develop an ion-selective electrode method for the continuous determination of the intracellular pH in Lactobacillus plantarum using a small-scale bioreactor. This method employed a salicylate-selective electrode basing on the distribution of salicylic acid across the cytoplasmic membrane. This developed electrode responded to salicylate concentrations above 20 μmol/L with a Nernstian sensitivity. The energized and concentrated cells were added into a thermostated small-scale bioreactor that contained the salicylate anions dissolved in a 100 mmol/L potassium phosphate buffer at different pH values. The changes in salicylate concentration that occurred in the medium containing bacterial suspension were measured as a voltage change. The cells of Lactobacillus plantarum showed maintenance of pH homeostasis at the studied pH ranging from 4.0 to 7.0, and they kept a neutral intracellular pH up to 5.8. The simplicity of the measuring preparation and the relatively low cellular concentration, as well as the advantages of the small-scale bioreactor, lead us to believe that the described method can facilitate the study of the physicochemical factors on the intracellular pH of lactic acid bacteria using a single pH probe in one method.
Parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) has emerged as a popular approach for targeted protein quantification. With high ion utilization efficiency and first-in-class acquisition speed, the timsTOF Pro provides a powerful platform for PRM analysis. However, sporadic chromatographic drift in peptide retention time represents a fundamental limitation for the reproducible multiplexing of targets across PRM acquisitions. Here, we present PRM-LIVE, an extensible, Python-based acquisition engine for the timsTOF Pro, which dynamically adjusts detection windows for reproducible target scheduling. In this initial implementation, we used iRT peptides as retention time standards and demonstrated reproducible detection and quantification of 1857 tryptic peptides from the cell lysate in a 60 min PRM-LIVE acquisition. As an application in functional proteomics, we use PRM-LIVE in an activity-based protein profiling platform to assess binding selectivity of small-molecule inhibitors against 220 endogenous human kinases.
The use of the title electrodes in electroanalysis of organic compounds is reviewed. The electrodes have gained popularity in a variety of electrochemical applications such as electrochemical sensors employed in voltammetric or liquid flow methods (HPLC, flow injection analysis, capillary electrophoresis). Due to their excellent properties, they are useful also in measurements under extreme conditions or in bioelectrochemical applications. The review summarizes the results obtained in the last decade.