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Dive into the research topics where Reine Nehmé is active.

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Featured researches published by Reine Nehmé.


Electrophoresis | 2008

Influence of polyelectrolyte coating conditions on capillary coating stability and separation efficiency in capillary electrophoresis.

Reine Nehmé; Catherine Perrin; Hervé Cottet; Marie Dominique Blanchin; Huguette Fabre

Polyelectrolytes are widely used in capillary electrophoresis as coating agents of silica capillaries to prevent adsorption phenomena and improve the repeatability of peptide and protein analysis. A systematic study of the coating experimental conditions has been carried out to optimize coating stability and performance. The main experimental parameters studied were the type and concentration of polyelectrolytes used in several monolayer and multilayer coatings, the ionic strength of coating and stabilizing solutions, and the procedures used for coating and capillary storage. Electroosmotic flow magnitude, direction and repeatability were used to monitor coating stability. Coating ability to limit adsorption was investigated by monitoring variations of migration times, time‐corrected peak areas and separation efficiency of test peptides. Capillary‐to‐capillary and batch‐to‐batch reproducibility was also studied. In addition, the separation performance of polyelectrolyte coatings were compared to those obtained with bare silica capillaries.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2011

Analysis of urinary neurotransmitters by capillary electrophoresis: sensitivity enhancement using field-amplified sample injection and molecular imprinted polymer solid phase extraction.

Bérengère Claude; Reine Nehmé; Philippe Morin

Capillary electrophoresis (CE) has been investigated for the analysis of some neurotransmitters, dopamine (DA), 3-methoxytyramine (3-MT) and serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) at nanomolar concentrations in urine. Field-amplified sample injection (FASI) has been used to improve the sensitivity through the online pre-concentration samples. The cationic analytes were stacked at the capillary inlet between a zone of low conductivity - sample and pre-injection plug - and a zone of high conductivity - running buffer. Several FASI parameters have been optimized (ionic strength of the running buffer, concentration of the sample protonation agent, composition of the sample solvent and nature of the pre-injection plug). Best results were obtained using H(3)PO(4)-LiOH (pH 4, ionic strength of 80 mmol L(-1)) as running buffer, 100 μmol L(-1) of H(3)PO(4) in methanol-water 90/10 (v/v) as sample solvent and 100 μmol L(-1) of H(3)PO(4) in water for the pre-injection plug. In these conditions, the linearity was verified in the 50-300 nmol L(-1) concentration range for DA, 3-MT and 5-HT with a determination coefficient (r(2)) higher than 0.99. The limits of quantification (10 nmol L(-1) for DA and 3-MT, 5.9 nmol L(-1) for 5-HT) were 500 times lower than those obtained with hydrodynamic injection. However, if this method is applied to the analysis of neurotransmitters in urine, the presence of salts in the matrix greatly reduces the sensitivity of the FASI/CE-UV method.Therefore, a solid phase extraction (SPE) on a dedicated imprinted polymer (MIP) was developed to extract specific neurotransmitters, catecholamines, metanephrines and indolamines, from urine. Matrix salts were thus discarded after sample extraction on AFFINIMIP™ Catecholamine & Metanephrine (100mg) cartridge. Therefore, lower limits of quantification were determined in artificial urine (46 nmol L(-1) for DA, 11 nmol L(-1) for 3-MT and 6 nmol L(-1) for 5-HT).The application of this protocol MIP-SPE/FASI-CE-UV analysis of neurotransmitters in human urine gave rise to electropherograms with a very good base line and signal to noise ratios above 15.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2010

Capillary electrophoresis procedure for the simultaneous analysis and stoichiometry determination of a drug and its counter-ion by using dual-opposite end injection and contactless conductivity detection: Application to labetalol hydrochloride

Reine Nehmé; Adrien Lascaux; Raphaël Delépée; Bérengère Claude; Philippe Morin

In this work, a capillary electrophoresis (CE) procedure was developed for the simultaneous determination of a pharmaceutical drug and its counter-ion, namely labetalol hydrochloride. For this purpose, an uncoated fused-silica capillary, a low conductivity background electrolyte (BGE) and a capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detector (C(4)D) were employed. This detection system is highly sensitive and enables detection of inorganic as well as organic ions unlike with direct UV detection. Moreover, to be able to simultaneously analyze the cationic drug (labetalol(+)) and its anionic counter-ion (Cl(-)) in the same electrophoretic run without the need of a coated capillary, a dual-opposite end injection was performed. In this technique, the sample is hydrodynamically injected into both ends of the capillary. This method is simple and easy to perform since the different injection steps are automated by the CE software. This novel CE-C(4)D procedure with dual-opposite end injection has been successfully validated and applied for the analysis of chloride content in an adrenergic antagonist (labetalol hydrochloride). Thus, the hereby developed method has been shown to enable fast (analysis time<10 min), precise (repeatability of migration times<0.7% and of corrected-peak areas < 3.3%; n=6) and rugged analyses for the simultaneous determination of a pharmaceutical drug and its counter-ion.


Electrophoresis | 2009

Influence of polyelectrolyte capillary coating conditions on protein analysis in CE

Reine Nehmé; Catherine Perrin; Hervé Cottet; Marie-Dominique Blanchin; Huguette Fabre

CE of biomolecules is limited by analyte adsorption on the capillary wall. To prevent this, monolayer or successive multiple ionic‐polymer layers (SMILs) of highly charged polyelectrolytes can be physically adsorbed on the inner capillary surface. Although these coatings have become commonly used in CE, no systematic investigation of their performance under different coating conditions has been carried out so far. In a previous study (Nehmé, R., Perrin, C., Cottet, H., Blanchin, M. D., Fabre, H., Electrophoresis 2008, 29, 3013–3023), we investigated the influence of different experimental parameters on coating stability, repeatability and peptide peak efficiency. Optimal coating conditions for monolayer and multilayer (SMILs) poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride/ poly(sodium 4‐styrenesulfonate) coated capillaries were determined. In this study, the influence of polyelectrolyte concentration and ionic strength of the coating solutions, and the number of coating layers on coating stability and performance in limiting protein adsorption was carried out. EOF magnitude and repeatability were used to monitor coating stability. Coating ability to limit protein adsorption was investigated by monitoring variations of migration times, time‐corrected peak areas and separation efficiency of test proteins. The separation performance of polyelectrolyte coatings were compared with those obtained with bare silica capillaries.


Electrophoresis | 2009

Use of coated capillaries for the electrophoretic separation of stereoisomers of a growth hormone secretagogue.

Reine Nehmé; Catherine Perrin; Vincent Guerlavais; Jean-Alain Fehrentz; Hervé Cottet; Jean Martinez; Huguette Fabre

The diastereoisomeric separation of peptidomimetics of hexarelin, a strong growth hormone secretagogue, in CE has been studied. Highly sulfated‐γ‐CD was found to be an appropriate selector for the separation of the stereoisomers. However, non‐repeatable analyses were obtained on bare fused silica capillary due to the progressive adsorption of the analytes on the capillary wall. Two types of polyelectrolyte coating agents were tested to prevent this phenomenon. Coating with neutral polyethylene oxide was found to be efficient but resulted in a very long analysis time (about 40 min). Coating with cationic poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride was found both to prevent analyte adsorption, reduce analysis time and alter separation selectivity. EOF measurement revealed that the highly sulfated‐γ‐CDs were strongly adsorbed on the poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride coating surface yielding a stable strong cathodic EOF, which considerably reduced analysis time (about 12 min). Very good repeatability of analysis was obtained (RSDmigration time<1%).


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2012

New development in in-capillary electrophoresis techniques for kinetic and inhibition study of enzymes.

Hala Nehmé; Reine Nehmé; Pierre Lafite; Sylvain Routier; Philippe Morin

Enzymes are often quantified by measuring their biological activity. Capillary electrophoresis is gaining its position in this field due to the ongoing trend to miniaturize biochemical assays. The aim of this work was to compare pre-capillary (off-line) and in-capillary electrophoresis techniques for studying enzymatic activity. The β-galactosidase (β-Gal) was chosen as a model enzyme. Each technique was optimized independently in order to decrease analyte consumption (to few tens of nanoliters), incubation time (to few seconds) and analysis time (below 1 min). Several experimental parameters (ionic strength of the background electrolyte (BGE) and of the incubation buffer, incubation time, injected volumes, …) were optimized by following peak efficiencies, resolution and repeatability. To monitor the performance of each technique, the catalytic constants (V(max) and K(m)) of 4-nitro-phenyl-d-galactopyranoside (PNPG) hydrolysis by β-Gal as well as the inhibition constants (K(i) and IC(50)) by a competitive inhibitor 2-nitrophenyl-1-thio-β-d-thiogalactopyranoside (ONPTG) were determined. The results obtained were cross compared and were also evaluated by comparison to a standard spectrophotometric method. EMMA proved to be the best technique in terms of sample consumption and speed. The short-end injection was successfully used which speeded-up electrophoretic analysis (<0.8 min). It is a very powerful tool for studying enzymatic inhibition. Usually, the inhibitor is injected in the capillary mixed to the substrate especially when both have similar mobilities. We show in this work, for the first time, that combining at-inlet reaction with EMMA-CE allows enzyme inhibition to be realized without any prior mixing of the substrate and the inhibitor. This approach is very interesting for screening inhibitors, rapidly and without excessive substrate consumption.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Stability of capillaries coated with highly charged polyelectrolyte monolayers and multilayers under various analytical conditions—Application to protein analysis

Reine Nehmé; Catherine Perrin; Hervé Cottet; Marie-Dominique Blanchin; Huguette Fabre

The stability of capillaries coated with highly charged polyelectrolytes under various analytical conditions was studied, as well as their performance for the analysis of proteins by Capillary Electrophoreis (CE) over a wide range of pH (2.5-9.3). In this study, fused silica capillaries were modified either with a poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride (PDADMAC) monolayer or PDADMAC/poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) (PSS) multilayer coatings, using optimal coating conditions previously determined. Results show that the coated capillaries are remarkably stable and efficient to limit protein adsorption under a variety of extreme electrophoretic conditions even in the absence of the coating agent in the background electrolyte which is exceptional for non-covalent coatings. Monolayer coated capillaries were demonstrated for the first time to be stable to acidic rinses and to organic solvents which proves that the stability of the capillaries is highly dependent on the coating procedure used. In addition, PDADMAC/PSS multilayer coatings were found to be stable to alkaline treatments. PDADMAC/PSS coated capillaries gave excellent performances for the analysis of proteins covering a large range of pI (4-11) and of molecular weight (14-65 kDa) over a wide pH range (i.e. 2.5-9.3). Even at high pH 9.3, protein analysis was possible with very good repeatabilities (RSD(tm)<1% and RSD(CPA)<2.6% (n ≥ 8)) and high peak efficiencies in the order of 700,000.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2014

Molecularly imprinted polymer dedicated to the extraction of glyphosate in natural waters.

K. Puzio; Bérengère Claude; L. Amalric; C. Berho; E. Grellet; S. Bayoudh; Reine Nehmé; Ph. Morin

Three molecularly imprinted polymers (MIPs) have been synthesized in order to bind efficiently glyphosate (GLY) in natural waters (mineral and underground). Since the target analyte is polar and hydrophilic, electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bonds have been favored with two templates (phenylphosphonic acid and diethyl(α-aminobenzyl)-phosphonic acid) and two functional monomers (1-allyl-2-thiourea and methacrylic acid). MIPs have been assessed by comparison of the recoveries obtained with MIP and NIP (non imprinted polymer) by solid-phase extraction (SPE). The selectivity of MIP versus NIP was satisfactory for the three imprinted polymers with a very straightforward protocol: conditioning of 250 mg of MIP or NIP packed in 3-mL polypropylene cartridges with 3 mL Milli-Q water, loading of Milli-Q water (15 mL) spiked with 5 mg L(-1) of GLY and its metabolite, aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) and elution by 3 mL NH4OH (10mM) or 3 mL HCl (100mM). SPE fractions were directly analyzed by capillary electrophoresis (CE). Thus, the recoveries of both analytes were greater than 80% for all MIPs and less than 25% for most NIPs. Moreover, the MIP prepared with 1-allyl-2-thiourea as functional monomer and phenylphosphonic acid as template displayed a capacity of 0.033 μmol/mg for GLY. However, the substitution of Milli-Q water by mineral water caused the decrease of MIP recoveries, for that, a pretreatment of the sample by ionic exchange resins was set up and succeeded in improving recoveries (about 50% for GLY and 25% for AMPA). Then, groundwaters were spiked with low concentrations of GLY and AMPA (0.5 μgL(-1)) and directly percolated through MIP cartridges. The extractions were carried out by triplicate and the elution fractions were analyzed by UPLC-MS/MS. The results showed no retention of AMPA but a total retention of GLY by MIP.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2013

Electrophoretically mediated microanalysis for in-capillaryelectrical cell lysis and fast enzyme quantification by capillary electrophoresis

Hala Nehmé; Reine Nehmé; Pierre Lafite; Eric Duverger; Sylvain Routier; Philippe Morin

AbstractIn this study, a novel capillary electrophoresis (CE)-based enzymatic assay was developed to evaluate enzymatic activity in whole cells. β-Galactosidase expression was used as an example, as it is a biomarker for assessing replicative senescence in mammalian cells. It catalyzes the hydrolysis of para-nitrophenyl-β-d-galactopyranoside (PNPG) into para-nitrophenol (PNP). The CE-based assay consisted of four main steps: (1) hydrodynamic injection of whole intact cells into the capillary, (2) in-capillary lysis of these cells by using pulses of electric field (electroporation), (3) in-capillary hydrolysis of PNPG by the β-galactosidase—released from the lysed cells—by the electrophoretically mediated microanalysis (EMMA) approach, and (4) on-line detection and quantification of the PNP formed. The developed method was applied to Escherichia coli as well as to human keratinocyte cells at different replicative stages. Results obtained by CE were in excellent agreement with those obtained from off-line cell lysates which proves the efficiency of the in-capillary approach developed. This work shows for the first time that cell membranes can be disrupted in-capillary by electroporation and that the released enzyme can be subsequently quantified in the same capillary. Enzyme quantification in cells after their in-capillary lysis has never been conducted by CE. The developed CE approach is automated, economic, eco-friendly, and simple to conduct. It has attractive applications in bacteria or human cells for early disease diagnostics or insights for development in biology. FigureElectropherograms for in-capillary reaction catalyzed by β-galactosidase obtained from off-capillary and in-capillary lysis of E. coli cells.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2016

Human neutrophil elastase inhibition studied by capillary electrophoresis with laser induced fluorescence detection and microscale thermophoresis.

Fayad Syntia; Reine Nehmé; Bérengère Claude; Philippe Morin

Capillary electrophoresis-laser induced fluorescence (CZE-LIF) and microscale thermophoresis (MST) were used for the first time to study the inhibition of human neutrophil elastase (HNE). We recently studied HNE kinetics (Km and Vmax) by developing an in-capillary CZE-LIF assay based on transverse diffusion of laminar flow profiles (TDLFP) for reactant mixing. In this work, the former assay was adapted to monitor HNE inhibition. Two natural well known HNE inhibitors from the triterpene family, ursolic acid and oleanolic acid, were tested to validate the developed assay. Since the solubility of pentacyclic triterpenes in aqueous media where the enzymatic reaction will take place is limited, the effect of DMSO and ethanol on HNE was studied using microscale thermophoresis (MST). An agglomeration of the enzyme was revealed when preparing the inhibitor in 5% (v/v) DMSO. This phenomenon did not occur in the presence of ethanol. Therefore, ethanol was used as inhibitor solvent, at a limited percentage of 20% (v/v). In these conditions and after optimization of the TDLFP approach, the repeatability (RSD on migration times and peak-areas inferior to 2.2%) of the CZE-LIF assay and the sensitivity (LOQ of few nM) were found to be satisfactory for conducting inhibition assays. IC50 values for ursolic and oleanolic acid were successfully determined. They were respectively equal to 5.62±0.10μM (r(2)=0.9807; n=3) and to 8.21±0.23μM (r(2)=0.9887; n=3). Excellent agreement was found between the results obtained by CE and those reported in literature which validates the developed method. Particularly, the CE-based assay is able to rank HNE inhibitors relative to each other. Furthermore, MST technique was used for evaluating HNE interaction with the ursolic acid. Up to 16 capillaries were automatically processed to obtain in one titration experiment the dissociation constant for the HNE-ursolic acid complex. Ki was found to be 2.72±0.66μM (n=3) which is in excellent agreement with the value determined by CE enzyme inhibition studies (Ki=2.81μM) confirming the reliability of the developed CE assay and the competitive inhibition mode of ursolic acid.

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Hala Nehmé

University of Orléans

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Hervé Cottet

University of Montpellier

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Huguette Fabre

University of Montpellier

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