Alessia Ciogli
Sapienza University of Rome
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Alessia Ciogli.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010
Lisa Moni; Alessia Ciogli; Ilaria D'Acquarica; Alessandro Dondoni; Francesco Gasparrini; Alberto Marra
Novel sugar-based silica gels were prepared by exploiting the copper-catalysed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) of two different sugar alkynes, namely, ethynyl C-galactoside 1 and propargyl O-lactoside 2, with new single-step azido-activated silica gels. The fully characterised stationary phases were generally used for hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC), with particular application in the stereoselective separation of monosaccharides. Dynamic HILIC (DHILIC) experiments were performed to evaluate the influence of mutarotation on the chromatographic peak shapes of two interconverting sugar anomers. The potential of such materials was shown in the separation of other highly polar compounds, including amino acids and flavonoids.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2010
Giovanna Cancelliere; Alessia Ciogli; Ilaria D’Acquarica; Francesco Gasparrini; Jelena Kocergin; Domenico Misiti; Marco Pierini; Harald Ritchie; Patrizia Simone; Claudio Villani
Three brush-type chiral stationary phases (CSPs) differing in the particle size of the starting silica particles have been prepared by covalent grafting of the pi-acidic bis-(3,5-dinitrobenzoyl)-derivative of trans-1,2-diaminocyclohexane (DACH-DNB). Starting silica particles of 4.3, 2.6 and 1.9micron were used to generate the final CSPs using an improved, highly reproducible synthetic methodology, that allowed to assemble and surface-graft the whole chiral selector in only two steps. The different CSPs have been packed in columns of various length and diameters, and fully characterized in terms of flow permeability, kinetic performances and enantioselectivity using a set of test solutes. Very high speed and high resolution applications together with stereodynamic HPLC examples are demonstrated on the columns with reduced particle diameters, on which separations of several enantiomeric pairs are routinely obtained with analysis times in the 15-40s range.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Dorina Kotoni; Alessia Ciogli; Carmela Molinaro; Ilaria D’Acquarica; Jelena Kocergin; Ted J. Szczerba; Harald Ritchie; Claudio Villani; Francesco Gasparrini
A new chiral stationary phase for ultrahigh-pressure liquid chromatography (UHPLC) applications was prepared by covalent attachment of the Whelk-O1 selector to spherical, high-surface-area 1.7-μm porous silica particles. Columns of varying dimensions (lengths of 50, 75, 100, and 150 mm and internal diameters of 3.0 or 4.6 mm) were packed and characterized in terms of permeability, efficiency, retention, and enantioselectivity, using both organic and water-rich mobile phases. A conventional HPLC Whelk-O1 column based on 5.0-μm porous silica particles and packed in a 250 mm × 4.6 mm column was used as a reference. Van Deemter curves, generated with low-molecular-weight solutes on a 100 mm × 4.6 mm column packed with the 1.7-μm particles, showed H(min) (μm) and μ(opt) (mm/s) values of 4.10 and 5.22 under normal-phase and 3.74 and 4.34 under reversed-phase elution conditions. The flat C term of the van Deemter curves observed with the 1.7-μm particles allowed the use of higher-than-optimal flow rates without significant efficiency loss. Kinetic plots constructed from van Deemter data confirmed the ability of the column packed with the 1.7-μm particles to afford subminute separations with good efficiency and its superior performances in the high-speed regime, compared to the column packed with 5.0-μm particles. Resolutions in the time scale of seconds were obtained using a 50-mm-long column in the normal phase or polar organic mode. The intrinsic kinetic performances of 1.7-μm silica particles are retained in the Whelk-O1 chiral stationary phase, clearly demonstrating the potentials of enantioselective UHPLC in terms of high speed, throughput, and resolution.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Nicola Di Iorio; Paolo Righi; Andrea Mazzanti; Michele Mancinelli; Alessia Ciogli; Giorgio Bencivenni
Remote control of the axial chirality of N-(2-t-butylphenyl)succinimides was realized via the vinylogous Michael addition of 3-substituted cyclohexenones to N-(2-t-butylphenyl)maleimides. 9-Amino(9-deoxy)epi-quinine promoted the enantioselective desymmetrization, leading to atropisomeric succinimides with two adjacent stereocenters.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2011
Enrica Calleri; Caterina Temporini; Francesco Gasparrini; Patrizia Simone; Claudio Villani; Alessia Ciogli; Gabriella Massolini
The development of epoxy organic monoliths with modulated hydrophilicity for the preparation of novel trypsin-based microreactors is reported. Porous polymer monoliths have been prepared using methacrylate chemistry triggered by γ-ray irradiation. In situ polymerization has been optimized and extended to medium and high polymer densities using glycidyl methacrylate (GMA) as reactive monomer as well as to the hydrophilic nature of the co-monomers (glyceryl monomethacrylate, GlyMA and acrylamide, AMD). Enzyme immobilization was smoothly achieved by passing a buffered trypsin solution through the columns kept at room temperature. The activities of the immobilized enzyme were characterized by the apparent Michaelis constant (K(m)) and the apparent maximum velocity (V(max)) of the reaction using a non chromogenic, low-molecular mass substrate N-α-benzoyl-l-arginine ethyl ester (BAEE). For the kinetic constants determination a new off-line chromatographic procedure was developed on purpose. The most efficient IMERs were obtained by immobilizing trypsin on monolithic skeleton prepared with hydrophilic monomers (GlyMA and AMD). One of the most promising bioreactor was applied to the digestion of model proteins with different molecular weight and complexity such as human serum albumin (HSA), β-casein and ribonuclease B (RNase B), and the produced peptides were analyzed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Using a digestion time of only 25 min the proteins were recognized by the database with satisfactory sequence coverage, which was 78.22, 49.76 and 80.68% for HSA, β-casein and RNase B, respectively.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2015
Luca Sciascera; Omar H. Ismail; Alessia Ciogli; Dorina Kotoni; Alberto Cavazzini; Lorenzo Botta; Ted J. Szczerba; Jelena Kocergin; Claudio Villani; Francesco Gasparrini
With the aim of exploring the potential of ultra-fast chiral chromatography for high-throughput analysis, the new sub-2 micron Whelk-O 1 chiral stationary phase (CSP) has been employed in supercritical fluid conditions to screen 129 racemates, mainly of pharmaceutical interest. By using a 5-cm long column (0.46cm internal diameter), a single co-solvent (MeOH) and a 7-min gradient elution, 85% of acidic and neutral analytes considered in this work have been successfully resolved, with resolution (Rs) larger than 2 in more than 65% of cases. Moreover, almost a half of basic samples that, for their own characteristics, are known to be difficult to separate on Whelk-O 1 CSP, have shown Rs greater than 0.3. The screening of the entire library could be accomplished in less than 24h (single run) with 63% of positive score. For well-resolved enantiomers (Rs roughly included between 1 and 3), we show that method transfer from gradient to isocratic conditions is straightforward. In many cases, isocratic ultra-fast separations (with analysis time smaller than 60s) have been achieved by simply employing, as isocratic mobile phase, the eluent composition at which the second enantiomer was eluted in gradient mode. By considering the extension and variety of the library in terms of chemico-physical and structural properties of compounds and numerousness, we believe that this work demonstrates the real potential of the technique for high-throughput enantioselective screening.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2016
Omar H. Ismail; Alessia Ciogli; Claudio Villani; Michela De Martino; Marco Pierini; Alberto Cavazzini; David S. Bell; Francesco Gasparrini
A new ultra-high performance teicoplanin-based stationary phase was prepared starting from sub-2 μm totally porous silica particles of narrow size distribution. Columns of different lengths were packed at high pressure and a deep and systematic evaluation of kinetic performance, in terms of van Deemter analysis, was performed under different elution conditions (HILIC, POM, RP and NP) by using both achiral and chiral probes. For the achiral probes, the efficiency of the columns at the minimum of the van Deemter curves were very high leading to some 278,000, 270,000, 262,000 and 232,000 plates/m in hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC), polar organic mode (POM), normal phase (NP) and reversed phase (RP) respectively. The lowest plate height, Hmin=3.59 μm (h(/)=1.89), was obtained under HILIC conditions at a flow rate of 1.4 mL/min. Efficiency as high as 200,000-250,000 plates/m (at the optimum flow rate) was obtained in the separation of the enantiomers of chiral probes under HILIC/POM conditions. N-protected amino acids, α-aryloxy acids, herbicides, anti-inflammatory agents were baseline separated on short (2-cm) and ultra-short (1-cm) columns, with analysis time in the order of 1 min. The enantiomers of N-BOC-d,l-methionine were successfully baseline separated in only 11s in HILIC mode. Several examples of fast and efficient resolutions in sub/supercritical fluid chromatography were also obtained for a range of chiral carboxylic acids.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2016
Omar H. Ismail; Luisa Pasti; Alessia Ciogli; Claudio Villani; Jelena Kocergin; Scott Anderson; Francesco Gasparrini; Alberto Cavazzini; Martina Catani
Pirkle-type Whelk-O1 chiral stationary phase (CSP) was prepared on 2.6μm superficially porous particles (SPPs). The chromatographic behavior of columns packed with this new CSP was compared with that of columns packed respectively with 1.8 and 2.5μm Whelk-O1 fully porous particles (FPPs). In the comparison, both thermodynamic and kinetic aspects were considered. Contrary to initial expectations, chiral columns packed with 2.6μm SPPs were quasi-comparable to those packed with 2.5μm FPPs, apparently due to larger contributions to band broadening from both eddy dispersion and, especially for the second eluted enantiomer, adsorption-desorption kinetics. These findings raise the question if SPPs, in spite of the undeniable advantages of their morphology to speed up mass transfer, are always the best choice for high-efficient ultrafast chiral separations. The last part of the work focuses on the use of short columns (10mm long) and very high flow rates to realize the separation of the enantiomers of trans-stilbene oxide (TSO) in normal phase mode in less than 1s.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2012
Dorina Kotoni; Alessia Ciogli; Ilaria D’Acquarica; Jelena Kocergin; Ted J. Szczerba; Harald Ritchie; Claudio Villani; Francesco Gasparrini
This paper reports on the thermodynamic and kinetic evaluation of a new ultra-high performance liquid chromatography broad-spectrum Pirkle-type chiral stationary phase (CSP) for enantioselective applications (eUHPLC). The well-known Whelk-O1 selector was covalently immobilized onto 1.7-μm high-surface-area, porous spherical silica particles to produce a totally synthetic, covalently bonded CSP that was packed into 150 mm, 100mm, 75 mm and 50mm columns, either 4.6 or 3.0mm ID. A 100 mm × 4.6 mm ID column was fully characterized from a kinetic and thermodynamic point of view, using as reference a conventional HPLC Whelk-O1 column, 250 mm×4.6mm ID, based on 5-μm porous silica particles. On the eUHPLC column, van Deemter plots generated H(min) values of 3.53 μm for 1,3-dinitrobenzene, at an interstitial mobile phase linear velocity (μ(inter)) of 5.07 mm/s, and H(min) of 4.26 and 4.17 μm for the two enantiomers of acenaphthenol, at μ(inter) of 4.85 mm/s and 4.24 mm/s, respectively. Resolution of 21 enantiomeric pairs including alcohols, epoxides, sulfoxides, phosphine oxides, benzodiazepines and 2-aryloxyproprionic esters used as herbicides, were obtained with significant advantages in terms of efficiency and analysis time. Speed gain factors were calculated for the different column geometries (150 mm, 100mm, 75 mm and 50mm, either 4.6 or 3.0mm ID), with respect to the standard HPLC column (250 mm ×4.6 mm ID), and were as high as 13, in the case of the 50-mm-long column, affording sub-minute separations of enantiomers with excellent resolution factors. In particular, trans-stilbene oxide was resolved in only 10s, while a 50 mm×3.0 mm ID column was used as a compromise between reduced mobile phase consumption (less than 1 mL per analysis) and smaller extra-column band-broadening effect. Given the relatively low viscosity in NP mode, and the excellent permeability of these eUHPLC columns, with backpressure values under 600 bar for a wide range of flow rates, the use of standard HPLC hardware is possible. In this case, however, a significant loss in resolution is observed, compared to the UHPLC instrumentation, if no modifications are introduced in the HPLC apparatus to reduce extra-column variance. The excellent efficiency and selectivity, conjugated with the very high-throughput and the ultra-fast analysis time, prove the potentials of the eUHPLC Whelk-O1 columns in the development of enantioselective UHPLC methods.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2014
Rocchina Sabia; Alessia Ciogli; Marco Pierini; Francesco Gasparrini; Claudio Villani
Diazepam and the structurally related 1,4-benzodiazepin-2-ones tetrazepam, prazepam and flunitrazepam are chiral molecules because they adopt a ground state conformation featuring a non-planar seven membered ring devoid of any reflection-symmetry element. The two conformational enantiomers of this class of benzodiazepines interconvert rapidly at room temperature by a simple ring flipping process. Low temperature HPLC on the Whelk-O1 chiral stationary phase allowed us to separate the conformational enantiomers of diazepam and of the related 1,4-benzodiazepin-2-ones, under conditions where the interconversion rate is sufficiently low, compared to the chromatographic separation rate. Diazepam, tetrazepam and prazepam showed temperature dependent dynamic HPLC profiles with interconversion plateaus indicative of on-column enantiomer interconversion (enantiomerization) in the temperature range between -10 °C and -35 °C, whereas for flunitrazepam on-column interconversion was observed at temperatures between -40 °C and -66 °C. Simulation of exchange-deformed HPLC profiles using a computer program based on the stochastic model yielded the apparent rate constants for the on-column enantiomerization and the corresponding free energy activation barriers. At -20 °C the enantiomerization barriers, ΔG(≠), for diazepam, prazepam and tetrazepam were determined to be in the range 17.6-18.7 kcal/mol. At -55 °C ΔG(≠) for flunitrazepam was determined to be in the 15.6-15.7 kcal/mol range. The experimental dynamic chromatograms and the corresponding interconversion barriers reported in this paper call for a reinterpretation of previously published results on the HPLC behavior of diazepam on chiral stationary phases.