Abstract
The pharmaceutical industry is rapidly advancing toward new drug modalities, necessitating the development of advanced analytical strategies for effective, meaningful, and reliable assays. Hydrophilic Interaction Chromatography (HILIC) is a powerful technique for the analysis of polar analytes. Despite being a well-established technique, HILIC method development can be laborious owing to the multiple factors that affect the separation mechanism, such as the selection of stationary phase chemistry, mobile phase eluents, and optimization of column equilibration time. Herein, we introduce a new automated multicolumn and multi-eluent screening workflow that streamlines the development of new HILIC assays, circumventing the existing tedious ‘hit-or-miss’ approach. A total of 12 complementary columns packed with sub-2 µm fully porous and 2.7 µm superficially porous particles operated on readily available ultra-high pressure liquid chromatography (UHPLC) instrumentation across a diverse set of commercially available polar stationary phases were investigated. Different mobile phases with pH ranging from pH 3 to 9 were evaluated using different organic modifier. The gradient and column re-equilibration were judiciously set to ensure a reliable assay screening framework yielding straightforward separation conditions for subsequent optimization and method deployment in fast-paced laboratory settings. This UHPLC screening system is coupled with a diode array and charged aerosol detectors (DAD and CAD) to ensure versatile detection for a variety of compounds. This fast-screening platform lays the foundation for a convenient generic workflow, accelerating the pace of HILIC method development and transfer across both academic and industrial sectors.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Table S1. List of compounds used in this study
Table S2. Retention reproducibilty with four minutes column equilibration time
Table S3. List of compounds with physicochemical properties in this study
Figure S1. Application of HILIC screening system for studying biocatalytic reaction
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