Protocol

High-Throughput Free Amino Acid Quantification from Maize Tissues

  1. Ruthie Angelovici2
  1. Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center, Division of Biological Sciences, Interdisciplinary Plant Group, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA
  1. 2Correspondence: angelovicir{at}missouri.edu
  1. 1 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Amino acids in maize can exist in both a free and protein-bound state. While most amino acids are part of a protein backbone, a small percentage of them remain free and play important biological roles, serving as signaling molecules, nitrogen transporters, osmolytes, and precursors for multiple primary and secondary metabolites. Their levels vary widely especially in maize leaves, depending on the developmental stage and in response to environmental conditions. Therefore, accurate and reliable quantification of free amino acids (FAAs) is vital in any effort aimed at studying their response to developmental and environmental cues. In this protocol, we describe a robust, high-throughput method that quantifies the 20 proteogenic amino acids (i.e., those that can be incorporated into proteins) that are found in the free form in maize tissue. This method consists of three major parts: first, aqueous extraction of FAAs from maize tissue; second, separation, detection, and quantification of all 20 proteogenic amino acids using ultraperformance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; and third, data analysis and processing using the MassLynx data analysis software, TargetLynx.

Footnotes

  • From the Maize collection, edited by Candice N. Hirsch and Marna D. Yandeau-Nelson. The entire Maize collection is available online at Cold Spring Harbor Protocols and can be accessed at https://cshprotocols.cshlp.org/.

Articles citing this article

This Article

  1. Cold Spring Harb Protoc © 2024 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
  1. All Versions of this Article:
    1. pdb.prot108631v1
    2. 2025/12/pdb.prot108631 most recent

Article Category

  1. Protocol

Personal Folder

  1. Save to Personal Folders

Updates/Comments

  1. Alert me when Updates/Comments are published

ORCID

Related Content

  1. Related Web Pages

Share