Abstract

The trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) method of R. Fields (1971, Biochem. J., 124, 581–590) has been modified for the manual detection of amino acids and peptides in chromatographic column effluent by changing the reaction conditions to 1 m m TNBS in 0.4 m potassium borate buffer, pH 9.2, at room temperature for 30 to 50 min. The reaction with amines and the spontaneous hydrolysis of TNBS are stopped by neutralization to pH 6.25 with sodium monobasic phosphate (0.33 m). Sodium sulfite (3 m m) is added to increase the absorptivity of the product. The TNBS reagent blank is less than 0.100 A 420 after 50 min of reaction. Since the Δ A 420 of the reagent blank is ∼0.002/min before quenching the reaction, and zero afterward, the time required for reaction and for absorbance measurements need not be controlled precisely. Alkaline hydrolysis of peptides is carried out prior to detection to increase the sensitivity of the method. This procedure is convenient for the manual determination of 5 to 100 nmol of amino acids in the 50–100 samples required to define a chromatographic elution profile.

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