• Title of article

    Influence of Natural, Electrically Neutral Lipids on the Potentiometric Responses of CationSelective Polymeric Membrane Electrodes

  • Author/Authors

    Umezawa، Yoshio نويسنده , , Bühlmann، Philippe نويسنده , , Hayakawa، Masakazu نويسنده , , Ohshiro، Takahito نويسنده , , Amemiya، Shigeru نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    -3198
  • From page
    3199
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Ionophore-free ion exchanger electrodes were found to exhibit quite a high selectivity for the creatininium ion; however, measurements in diluted urine samples revealed large emf drifts. Potentiometric, chromatographic, NMR, and mass spectrometric evidence did not reveal any major cationic interfering agents, and anionic interfering agents cannot trivially explain the consistently positive emf drifts. Ultrafiltration of urine samples showed that the interfering agents have molecular weights below 1000 u. The drifts are apparently caused by electrically neutral lipophilic compounds of low molecular weight that are easily extracted into organic phases. Follow-up experiments showed that p-cresol and cholesterol cause no significant emf responses but that coproporphyrin, phosphatidylserine, taurocholic acid, cholic acid, phosphatidylethanolamine, and octanoic acid cause positive emf drifts of the type that was observed with the urine samples. The extent of the responses and the response time depend not only on the specific compound but also on the cation in the sample solution. These results suggest that the emf drifts are due to extraction of such natural lipids into the organic membrane phase where they interact in an ionophore-like fashion with the analyte and interfering ions. Changes in the potentiometric selectivities after contact with natural lipids support this interpretation. The same effect of natural lipids is also expected for ionophorebased electrodes. Indeed, exposure of a valinomycin-based electrode to a methylene chloride extract of urine resulted in a significant reduction of the Na+ discrimination, increasing log from -3.9 to -3.1.
  • Journal title
    Analytical Chemistry
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Analytical Chemistry
  • Record number

    50861