TY - JOUR
T1 - A simple, sensitive, and specific method for the extraction and determination of thiamine and thiamine phosphate esters in fresh yeast biomass
AU - Rocchi, Rebecca
AU - van Kekem, Kees
AU - Heijnis, Walter H.
AU - Smid, Eddy J.
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - Thiamine is an essential vitamin for most living organisms, of which yeasts are a rich nutritional source. In this study we developed a thiamine extraction and determination method to detect thiamine in fresh yeast biomass. The thiamine determination method combines the derivatization of thiamine to a highly fluorescent product, with chromatographic separation (HPLC) and fluorescence detection. The method specifically detects free thiamine (T), thiamine phosphate (TP), and thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP). It has a high sensitivity of 2 ng/ml for TPP and TP, and 1 ng/ml for T, excellent instrumental repeatability, and low day-to-day variation in retention time of the different phosphate forms. We demonstrated the robustness of the method by proving that the fluorescence signals of the derivatised samples are stable for at least 82 h after derivatization, and by showing that the final pH of the samples does not influence the fluorescent response. In addition, we developed and validated a thiamine extraction method consisting of beads beating the fresh yeast biomass in 0.1 M HCl using a lysing matrix composed of 0.1 mm silica spheres. The performance of this method was compared to extraction via heat treatment at 95 °C for 30 min, and a combination of beads beating and heat treatment carried out in different order. We demonstrated that thiamine extraction via beads beating is the only method that prevents the biologically active form thiamine pyrophosphate to be degraded to thiamine phosphate, therefore, the extraction method developed and described in this study is preferred when the different thiamine vitamers need to be detected in their actual proportions. The combination of the extraction via beads beating, the conversion of all vitamers to the thiochrome derivatives, and the separation of these compounds on the reversed phase HPLC with a fluorescence detector, yielded a sensitive, specific, repeatable, and robust method for extraction and determination of vitamin B1 in fresh yeast biomass.
AB - Thiamine is an essential vitamin for most living organisms, of which yeasts are a rich nutritional source. In this study we developed a thiamine extraction and determination method to detect thiamine in fresh yeast biomass. The thiamine determination method combines the derivatization of thiamine to a highly fluorescent product, with chromatographic separation (HPLC) and fluorescence detection. The method specifically detects free thiamine (T), thiamine phosphate (TP), and thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP). It has a high sensitivity of 2 ng/ml for TPP and TP, and 1 ng/ml for T, excellent instrumental repeatability, and low day-to-day variation in retention time of the different phosphate forms. We demonstrated the robustness of the method by proving that the fluorescence signals of the derivatised samples are stable for at least 82 h after derivatization, and by showing that the final pH of the samples does not influence the fluorescent response. In addition, we developed and validated a thiamine extraction method consisting of beads beating the fresh yeast biomass in 0.1 M HCl using a lysing matrix composed of 0.1 mm silica spheres. The performance of this method was compared to extraction via heat treatment at 95 °C for 30 min, and a combination of beads beating and heat treatment carried out in different order. We demonstrated that thiamine extraction via beads beating is the only method that prevents the biologically active form thiamine pyrophosphate to be degraded to thiamine phosphate, therefore, the extraction method developed and described in this study is preferred when the different thiamine vitamers need to be detected in their actual proportions. The combination of the extraction via beads beating, the conversion of all vitamers to the thiochrome derivatives, and the separation of these compounds on the reversed phase HPLC with a fluorescence detector, yielded a sensitive, specific, repeatable, and robust method for extraction and determination of vitamin B1 in fresh yeast biomass.
KW - Extraction
KW - Liquid chromatography
KW - Saccharomyces cerevisiae
KW - Thiamine
KW - Thiochrome
KW - Yeast
U2 - 10.1016/j.mimet.2022.106561
DO - 10.1016/j.mimet.2022.106561
M3 - Article
C2 - 36041639
AN - SCOPUS:85138643596
SN - 0167-7012
VL - 201
JO - Journal of Microbiological Methods
JF - Journal of Microbiological Methods
M1 - 106561
ER -