Fast and accurate quantitation of glucans in complex mixtures by optimized heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy

Anal Chem. 2013 Sep 17;85(18):8802-8. doi: 10.1021/ac401980m. Epub 2013 Aug 23.

Abstract

Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a widely used technique for mixture analysis, but it has shortcomings in resolving carbohydrate mixtures due to the narrow chemical shift range of glycans in general and fragments of homopolymers in particular. Here, we suggest a protocol toward fast spectroscopic glycan mixture analysis. We show that a plethora of oligosaccharides comprising only α-glucopyranosyl residues can be resolved into distinct quantifiable signals with NMR experiments that are substantially faster than chromatographic runs. Conceptually, the approach fully exploits the narrow line widths of glycans (ν1/2 < 3 Hz) in the (13)C spectral dimension while disregarding superfluous spectral information in compound identification and quantitation. The acetal (H1C1) groups suffice to spectroscopically resolve ∼20 different starch fragments in optimized (1)H-(13)C NMR with a narrow (13)C spectral width (3 ppm) that allows sampling the indirect (13)C dimension at high resolution within 15 min. Rapid quantitations by high-resolution NMR data are achieved for glycans at concentrations as low as 10 μg/mL. For validation, comparisons were made with quantitations obtained by more time-consuming chromatographic methods and yielded coefficients of determination (R(2)) above 0.99.

MeSH terms

  • Beer / analysis*
  • Glucans / analysis*
  • Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular / methods*
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Glucans