A simple, rapid and highly sensitive high-performance liquid chromatographic method with fluorescence detection for determining the enantiomers of methamphetamine and its major metabolites, amphetamine and p-hydroxymethamphetamine, in urine samples was developed. Using a newly developed reagent for amines, namely, 4-(4,5-diphenyl-1H-imidazol-2-yl)benzoyl chloride, six enantiomers were derivatized under mild conditions (i.e., 10 min at room temperature, pH 9.0) and separated isocratically on a cellulose tris(3,5-dimethylphenylcarbamate) coated silica gel column following a pre-separation on an ODS column within 42 min, and the effluent was monitored at 440 nm (lambda ex 330 nm). Calibration curves for these derivatives using spiked human urine were linear in the range 0.05-100 mumol dm-3 with correlation coefficients > or = 0.999. The detection limits at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3 were 2.8-8.8 fmol per 5 microliters injection. The relative standard deviations of within- (n = 6) and between-day (n = 5) variations were < or = 7.4%. The method was successfully applied to discriminate between (S)-(+)-methamphetamine and its corresponding metabolites found in abusers' urine and their antipodes in a sample taken from a Parkinsonian patient on selegiline (Deprenyl) therapy.
In this study, we identified a region in the human parvovirus structural protein which involves the neutralization of the virus by a monoclonal antibody and site-specific synthetic peptides. A newly established monoclonal antibody reacted with both viral capsid proteins VP1 and VP2. The epitope was found in six strains of independently isolated human parvovirus B19. The monoclonal antibody could protect colony-forming unit erythroid in human bone marrow cell culture from injury by the virus. The monoclonal antibody reacted with only 1 of 12 peptides that were synthesized according to a predicted amino acid sequence based on nucleotide sequences of the coding region for the structural protein of B19 virus. The sequence recognized by the antibody was a site corresponding to amino acids 328 to 344 from the amino-terminal portion of VP2. This evidence suggests that the epitope of the viral capsid protein is located on the surface of the virus and may be recognized by virus-neutralizing antibodies.
We identified and mapped the regions responsible for neutralization in the human parvovirus B19 structural protein by using region-specific human antibodies derived from seropositive blood donors. The region-specific antibodies were purified by using affinity columns coupled with synthetic peptides of the hydrophilic regions including the s-turn structure deduced by the predicted secondary structure of VP2. Fifteen highly specific antibodies against the synthetic peptides were obtained. Ten of them were able to precipitate the radiolabeled virus. Six of them proved to be able to protect the colony-forming unit erythroid cells in human bone marrow cell cultures from injury by the virus. The sequences recognized by the six neutralizing antibodies were sites corresponding to amino acids 253 to 272, 309 to 330, 325 to 346, 359 to 382, 449 to 468, and 491 to 515 from the amino-terminal portion of VP2. These observations suggest that the neutralizing epitopes were distributed in the region from amino acid 253 in the amino-terminal portion of VP2 to the carboxyl terminus of VP2.
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