Change in cation concentration, including that of potassium and sodium, is characteristic of apoptosis, therefore it is significant to detect cation concentration changes. In this work a rapid, sensitive, and practical method was developed for the determination of Na+ and K+ concentration in HeLa cells during emodin induced apoptosis by a low-cost capillary electrophoresis device with capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection (CE-C4D). Under the optimized conditions, both ions were baseline separated in 4 min with 40 mM MES/40 mM His containing 1 mM 18-crown-6 as the separation buffer at pH 6.0. The limit of detections (LODs) and limit of quantifications (LOQs) were 0.47-1.15 μM and 1.58-3.86 μM, respectively. The precision for migration times and peak areas was below 0.56% and 3.74%, respectively. The data proved that the concentration of cations in cells can be accurately quantified. It was found that the K+ concentration decreased from 82.2 μM to 52.7 μM, and the Na+ concentration increased from 62.4 μM to 127.2 μM during the process of apoptosis when the cell density was 1 × 105 cells per mL. The low-cost CE-C4D provides a convenient way to decipher the interaction of Na+ and K+ in the regulation of cell apoptosis.
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, J., Wei, X., Wang, Y., Ren, B., Zhao, L., Wang, Z., & Pu, Q. (2018). Rapid quantitation of multiple ions released from HeLa cells during emodin induced apoptosis by low-cost capillary electrophoresis with capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection. RSC Advances, 8(33), 18266–18271. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8ra00492g
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