Simultaneous analysis of seven oligopeptides in microbial fuel cell by micro-fluidic chip with reflux injection mode.
Wang. Wei W; Wang. Zijian Z; Lin. Xiuli X; Wang. ZongWen Z; Fu. FengFu F
Key Findings
- Reflux injection mode lets users control sample plug size for better resolution or sensitivity
- All seven tested oligopeptides, including KPV, were fully separated and detected in under 12 minutes
- Detection limits ranged from 25 to 625 nmol/L and the method was used to monitor peptide consumption by bacteria in a fuel cell
Practical Outcomes
- The technique is useful for researchers needing precise peptide analysis in engineered systems, but it doesn’t provide any actionable guidance for using KPV to improve longevity, metabolism, or performance.
Summary
The paper describes a new lab chip that can separate and measure tiny amounts of several short peptides, including KPV, in a microbial fuel cell. It’s about improving detection methods, not about health effects or how to use KPV for performance.
Abstract
In this work, a reflux injection mode for the cross form micro-fluidic chip was studied. This injection mode could flexibly control the length of sample plug from less than one channel width (<83 μm) to tens of channel widths (millimeter-sized) by adjusting the injection time. Namely, the separation resolution or sample detection sensitivity could be selectively improved by changing injection time. Composed of four steps, the reflux injection mode alleviated the electrophoretic sampling bias and prevented sample leakage successfully. On a micro-fluidic chip coupled with laser induced fluorescence (LIF) detector, the injection mode was applied to separate seven oligopeptides, namely GG, GL, RPP, KPV, VKK, WYD and YWS. All analytes were completely separated and detected within 12 min with detection limits of 25-625 nmol/L. At last, the proposed method had been successfully applied to detect oligopeptides consumed by bacillus licheniformis in anode chamber of microbial fuel cell (MFC) to study the effect of oligopeptides on the MFC running.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-08-18T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.talanta.2012.07.079
8
35