Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS

Our CCBS database includes more than 11,000 abstracts of publications. Perform your own detailed search of TLC/HPTLC literature and find relevant information.

The Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service CCBS contains all abstracts of CBS issues beginning with CBS 51. The database is updated after the publication of every other CBS edition. Currently the Cumulative CAMAG Bibliography Service includes more than 11'000 abstracts of publications between 1983 and today. With the online version you can perform your own detailed TLC/HPTLC literature search:

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      130 029
      Efficient isolation of mycosporine-like amino acids from marine red algae by fast centrifugal partition chromatography
      M. ZWERGER, S. SCHWAIGER, M. GANZERA* (*Department of Pharmacognosy, Institute of Pharmacy, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria; markus.ganzera@uibk.ac.at)

      Marine Drugs 20(2), 106 (2022). TLC was used to monitor the fractionation of hydro-methanolic extracts of Rhodophytes: Gracilaria gracilis (Gracilariaceae) (A), Porphyra sp. (Bangiaceae) (B), Spongoclonium pastorale (Ceramiaceae / Wrangeliaceae) (C); and to assess the purity of two isolated mycosporine-like amino acids: porphyra-334 and shinorine.  TLC on silica gel with n-butanol - acetic acid - water 3:1:1. Derivatization by spraying ninhydrin reagent for the detection of peptides and amino-acids; or by spraying anisaldehyde - sulfuric acid for most phytochemicals; in both cases, followed by 5 min heating at 100 °C. Visualization under white light and at 366 nm. Porphyra-334 (hRF 28) was isolated pure from (B) and (C). Shinorine (hRF 25), isolated from (A) and (B), contained a coeluting sugar (hRF 48), which was absent after further purification on solid phase extraction, and, only when isolated from (B), a coeluting peptide or amino-acid (hRF 35), which was absent after further purification on cyclodextrane column chromatography.

      Classification: 4d, 18a, 32e
      129 064
      Effect-directed profiling and identification of bioactive metabolites from field, in vitro-grown and acclimatized Musa spp. accessions using high-performance thin-layer chromatography-mass spectrometry
      I.O. AYOOLA-ORESANYA, M.A. SONIBAREA, B. GUEYEB, R. PALIWALB, M.T. ABBERTON, Gertrud E. MORLOCK* (*Institute of Nutritional Science, and Interdisciplinary Research Centre for Biosystems, Land Use and Nutrition, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, Germany; gertrud.morlock@uni-giessen.de)

      J Chromatogr A, 1616, 460774 (2020). Methanolic extracts of leaves of Musa acuminata, M. balbisiana and M. sapientum (Musaceae), either from fields or from in vitro cultures or from the plantlets derived from in vitro culture and acclimatized in isolated warm room, were separated on HPTLC silica gel layers with toluene – ethyl acetate – methanol 6:3:1 or ethyl acetate – toluene – formic acid – water 34:5:7:5. When intended for MS experiments, layers were previously washed twice with methanol – formic acid 10:1, once with acetonitrile – methanol 2:1 and air-dried. Evaluation under white light, UV 254 nm and 366 nm. Derivatization by immersion (2s, 2cm/s) into natural product reagent preceded by heating at 110 °C for 5 min, or into anisaldehyde sulfuric acid reagent, diphenylamine aniline reagent, ninhydrin reagent, followed by the same heating procedure. Besides, plates were neutralized by cold air stream followed with phosphate buffer (8 %, pH 7.5) piezoelectrically sprayed on the plates and automated plate drying. Thereafter, 9 effect-directed assays (EDA) were performed for free radical (DPPH•) scavengers, for enzymatic inhibitors (α-amylase, acetyl- and butyryl-cholinesterase, α- and β-glucosidase), for antimicrobial compounds (Gram-positive Bacillus subtilis assay, Gram-negative Aliivibrio fischeri bioluminescence assay), and for mutagenic compounds (SOS response – UMU-C test using Salmonella typhimurium suspension and 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide as positive control). The bands of 4 active compounds were eluted with methanol through a TLC-MS interface pump into a quadrupole-Orbitrap mass spectrometer. Full scan mass spectra (m/z 50−800) in the positive and negative ionization modes were recorded using electrospray ionization (ESI, spray voltage 3.3kV, capillary temperature 320°C, collision energy 35 eV). By comparison to a standard, one band present in all samples was identified as linolenic acid. For the other bands, only present in in vitro grown accessions, only raw molecular formulas and phytochemical classes were assigned (a pyrrolidine alkaloid, an amino-acid, a phenolic derivative).

      Classification: 4e, 7, 11a, 18a, 22, 32e
      128 043
      Nutritional and phytochemical profiling of nutracereal finger millet (Eleusine coracana L.) genotypes
      U. NAKARANI, D. SINGH*, K. SUTHAR, N. KARMAKAR, P. FALDU, H. PATIL (*Department of Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, ACHF, NAU, Navsari, Gujarat 396 450, India, diwakar@nau.in)

      Food Chem. 341, 128271 (2021). HPTLC of finger millet (Eleusine coracana L.) on silica gel with n-butanol - water - acetic acid 4:1:1. Detection by spraying with ninhydrin, followed by heating at 100 °C. Amino acid profiling under UV light at 546 nm. The hRF values for 21 standard amino acids ranged from 2 to 51.

      Classification: 18a
      127 052
      Pressurized planar electrochromatography of DNS amino acids derivatives in silica gel and silanized silica gel systems with formic acid addition to the water mobile phase
      A. CHOMICKI*, T. DZIDO (*Department of Physical Chemistry, Medical University of Lublin, Chodźki 4a Str., 20-098 Lublin, Poland, adam.chomicki@umlub.pl)

      J. Planar Chromatogr. 34, 105-111 (2021). HPTLC of dansyl derivatives of amino acids on silica gel (1) and RP-18 (2) with acetonitrile in the concentration range from 0 to 40 % in water - formic acid solution for (1) and acetonitrile in the concentration range from 10 to 85 % in water - formic acid solution for (2). Pressurized planar electrochromatography (PPEC) under the same conditions with polarization voltage 0.500 kV and separation time of 15 min. Detection under UV light. The separation selectivity is different between HPTLC and PPEC due to the electrophoretic effect in PPEC.

      Classification: 18a
      127 002
      Low temperature plasma probe mass spectrometry for analytes separated on thin-layer chromatography plates: direct vs. laser assisted desorption.
      X. GONG, D. ZHANG, I. B. EMBILE, Y. SHE, S. SHI, G. GAMEZ* (*Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, USA; gerardo.gamez@ttu.edu)

      J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 31(9), 1981-1993 (2020). Low-temperature plasma-mass spectrometry was studied for comparison between direct desorption (DD) and diode laser assisted desorption (LD) in terms of quantitative and qualitative analysis of compounds from cellulose vs. silica gel TLC layers. Compounds (the 20 common amino acids, propofol, nicotine, cotinine, salicylamide, acetylsalicylic acid, paracetamol, caffeine, valprolactone and its isomer 4-ene-valproic acid) were applied on the TLC plates (without development) at different concentrations; a commercial mixture of acetylsalicylic acid, paracetamol and caffeine was also applied on TLC plates, developed with dichloromethane – ethyl acetate 1:50, detection at UV 254 nm and quantitative MS. In general, DD provided good results on cellulose, where LODs where between 0.01 and 2.55 ng/mm2, whereas several compounds remained undetected on silica gel. LD however provided LODs on silica gel from 0.3 to 84 pg/mm2. Tandem MS with collision-induced dissociation was implemented to improve signals, LODs and to characterize the other analytical figures-of-merits (including detection of the main fragment ions, determination of optimal laser beam width and irradiance depending on the compounds). For the two metabolites of valproic acid, the ions and fragments had identical values; therefore, a mix of the two isomers had to be applied and separated with dichloromethane – methanol 50:1 before MS; one half of the plate was visualized for control by dipping into potassium permanganate reagent (7.5g KMnO4, 50g K2CO3, 0.75g NaOH in 1L water).

      Classification: 4e, 7, 8b, 11a, 18a, 22
      126 035
      Structure–retardation factor relationship of natural amino acids in two different mobile phases of RP-TLC
      S. YOUSEFINEJAD*, F. HONARASA, S. AKBARI, M. NEKOEINIA (*Research Center for Health Sciences, Department of Occupational Health Engineering, Institute of Health, School of Health, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz 71645, Iran, yousefisa@sums.ac.ir)

      J. Liq. Chromatogr. Relat. Technol. 43, 580-588 (2020). Retardation factor (hRF) of 42 amino acids in two different eluents (acetonitrile - sodium azide and 1,2 dioxane-sodium azide solutions) were predicted by different quantitative structure-retention relationship (QSRR) methods. The method analyzed the effect of sum of geometrical distances between N and O in separation of amino acids in RP-TLC.

      Classification: 2c, 18a
      102 061
      Experimental and model investigation of the oscillatory transenantiomerization of L-alpha-phenylalanine
      M. SAJEWICZ, M. GONTARSKA, L. WOJTAL, D. KRONENBACH, M. LEDA, I. R. EPSTEIN, Teresa KOWALSKA* (*Institute of Chemistry, University of Silesia, 9 Szkolna Street, 40-006 Katowice, Poland; kowalska@us.edu.pl)

      J. Liq. Chromatogr. Relat. Technol. 31, 1986-2005 (2008). TLC of L-alpha-phenylalanine on silica gel (prewashed by development with methanol - water 9:1) impregnated by dipping for 2 s in a 24 mMol/L aqueous solution of copper sulfate, followed by drying for 10 min at 110 °C and dipping in 30 mMol/L proline in water - methanol 9:1. The mobile phase was n-butanol - acetonitrile - water 6:2:3. Quantitative determination by absorbance measurement at 200 nm. The ability of L-alpha-phenylalanine to undergo oscillatory transenantiomerization was demonstrated. A skeleton molecular mechanism for the same process was proposed.

      Classification: 18a, 38
      109 048
      Use of genetic algorithms and artificial neural networks to predict the resolution of amino acids in thin-layer chromatography
      T. ROLICH, Iva REZIC* (*Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry, Department of Applied Chemistry, Faculty of Textile Technology, University of Zagreb, Prilaz baruna Filipovica 28a, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia; iva_rezic@net.hr)

      J. Planar Chromatogr. 24, 16-22 (2011). A novel method is proposed for optimization of simultaneous thin-layer chromatographic separation of seven amino acids. For this purpose a useful combination of genetic algorithms (GA) with artificial neural networks (ANN) was employed. Methods investigated in this work were successfully used for prediction of resolution (RS) and optimization of the separation of model solutions containing the seven compounds. Very good correlation was achieved between predicted and calculated RS data, and low absolute and relative errors were obtained. TLC of alanine, asparagine, cysteine, leucine, phenylalanine, serine and threonine on cellulose with butanol - acetic acid - water 11:4:5 in a saturated chamber. Detection by spraying with ninhydrin reagent, followed by heating on a plate heater. The hRf values of the amino acids were 30, 36, 44, 50, 52, 72, and 79, respectively.

      Keywords:
      Classification: 18a