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Liquid Chromatographic Isolation of Individual Amino Acids Extracted From Sediments for Radiocarbon Analysis

Thomas M. Blattmann, Daniel B. Montluçon, Negar Haghipour, Naoto F. Ishikawa, Timothy I. Eglinton

2020Frontiers in Marine Science31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The “building blocks of life” are found nearly ubiquitously in the environment in the form of proteins, peptides, and single amino acids. To shed light on amino acid sources, cycling, and preservation in sedimentary environments, we present a method using high-pressure liquid chromatography to separate and isolate underivatized amino acids extracted from sediments to conduct compound-specific radiocarbon analysis. This method consists of three main steps including (1) amino acid extraction by hydrofluoric and hydrochloric acids followed by desalting, (2) liquid chromatographic isolation and purification using two complementary column chemistries, and (3) post-purification and measurement by accelerator mass spectrometry. The resulting blank of this procedure is estimated to contain 2.2±1.3 µgC with 0.25±0.09 Fm.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatographyAmino acidMass spectrometryChemistryHydrofluoric acidHydrochloric acidExtraction (chemistry)Organic chemistryBiochemistryIsotope Analysis in EcologyMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyRadioactive contamination and transfer
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