Issue 1, 2004

Investigation of the aluminium binding in Al(iii)-treated neuroblastoma cells

Abstract

Different hyphenated techniques have been employed for the first time for a comparative study of control and metal-exposed cell lines, one of the important research areas in the field of metallomics. Speciation of aluminium (an element implicated in a variety of neurological disorders) was investigated in neuroblastoma cells exposed to aluminium lactate by size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SE-HPLC-ICP-MS) and capillary electrophoresis (CE-ICP-MS). Whereas in control cells the most intense Al compound co-eluted with the Al–transferrin complex, in size-exclusion chromatography, in exposed cells a low molecular weight bioligand was synthesized. The latter bound all the Al(III) metabolised by exposed cells in the form of a negatively-charged complex. This complex turned out to be more stable than the protein complex of Al(III) in control cells. The isolated low molecular weight Al species did not produce a signal in electrospray mass spectrometry (ES-MS) and its behaviour investigated by size-exclusion, reversed-phase HPLC and CE excluded its being hydroxide, citrate, phosphate or residual lactate from the culture medium.

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
08 Jul 2003
Accepted
01 Aug 2003
First published
19 Aug 2003

J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2004,19, 41-45

Investigation of the aluminium binding in Al(III)-treated neuroblastoma cells

K. Połeć-Pawlak, P. Zambenedetti, J. Szpunar, R. Łobiński and P. Zatta, J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2004, 19, 41 DOI: 10.1039/B307767P

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