Issue 20, 2024

Quantifying platinum binding on protein-functionalized magnetic microparticles using single particle-ICP-TOF-MS

Abstract

This work describes an analytical procedure, single particle-inductively coupled plasma-time-of-flight-mass spectrometry (SP-ICP-TOF-MS), that was developed to determine the platinum binding efficiency of protein-coated magnetic microparticles. SP-ICP-TOF-MS is advantageous due to its ability to quasi-simultaneously detect all nuclides (7Li–242Pu), allowing for both platinum and iron (composition of magnetic microparticles) to be measured concurrently. This method subsequently allows for the differentiation between bound and unbound platinum. The 1 μm magnetic microparticles were fully characterized for their iron concentration, particle concentration, and trace element composition by bulk digestion-ICP-MS and SP-ICP-TOF-MS. The results of both approaches agreed with the certificate values. Using the single particle methodology the platinum loading was quantified to be to 0.18 ± 0.02 fg per particle and 0.32 ± 0.02 fg per particle, for the streptavidin-coated and azurin-coated microparticles, respectively. Both streptavidin-coated and the azurin-coated microparticles had a particle–platinum association of >65%. Platinum bound samples were also analyzed via bulk digestion-based ICP-MS. The bulk ICP-MS results overestimated platinum loading due to free platinum in the samples. This highlights the importance of single particle analysis for a closer inspection of platinum binding performance. The SP-ICP-TOF-MS approach offers advantages over typical bulk digestion methods by eliminating laborious sample preparation, enabling differentiation between bound/unbound platinum in a solution, and quantification of platinum on a particle-by-particle basis. The procedure presented here enables quantification of metal content per particle, which could be broadly implemented for other single particle applications.

Graphical abstract: Quantifying platinum binding on protein-functionalized magnetic microparticles using single particle-ICP-TOF-MS

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
14 Feb 2024
Accepted
13 Apr 2024
First published
15 Apr 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Anal. Methods, 2024,16, 3192-3201

Quantifying platinum binding on protein-functionalized magnetic microparticles using single particle-ICP-TOF-MS

V. C. Bradley, B. T. Manard, L. Hendriks, D. R. Dunlap, A. N. Bible, A. Sedova, P. Saint-Vincent, B. C. Sanders and H. B. Andrews, Anal. Methods, 2024, 16, 3192 DOI: 10.1039/D4AY00268G

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