o-Aminophenol reacts with vitamin A aldehyde (retinal) in acid medium to produce an intense red colour. A method is proposed for the micro detection of vitamin A (retinol) through its conversion to the corresponding aldehyde. B-Carotene does not interfere.
B-Carotene interferes with the detection and determination of vitamin A. A method is proposed whereby a test responds to vitamin A and not to b-carotene. The test is based on an observation that vitamin A aldehyde (retinal) reacts with o-aminophenol in an acidic medium to form an intense red colour. Sondheimer et al.’ reported that manganese dioxide is a selective oxidizing agent for allylic alcohols converting them to the corresponding carbonyl compounds. In the proposed test, vitamin A (retinol) is converted with manganese dioxide to the corresponding a-/l unsaturated aldehyde (retinal) which in turn reacts with o-aminophenol in an acidic medium to produce an intense red colour. The colour formed could be due to a combined effect of an extended conjugation involving nine double bonds in the Schiff base and to resonance. p-carotene does not interfere. EXPERIMENTb4L
Reagents I. Saturated solution of freshly sublimed o-aminophenol in chloroform. 2. Solid manganese dioxide freshly prepared and stored in a desiccator. The manganese dioxide may be prepared* by placing 55 g of manganous sulfate monohydrate and 150 ml of distilled water in a 2-1, three-neck flask equipped with a stirrer. The mixture is heated with stirring to 86” and a solution of 60 g of potassium permanganate in 400 ml of water (75-85O) is added in portions of 30-35 ml over about an hour and a half keeping the temperature at 75-85”. After completion of the addition the mixture is heated with stirring for 20 min more and filtered while hot. * E. P. Papadopoulos
The solid is washed with distilled water until the reaction for sulfate in the filtrate becomes quite faint. The solid is then dehydrated in the oven for 48 h at IIO-IZO’. An easily powdered brown solid is obtained. 3. Chloroform. 4. Concentrated hydrochloric acid. Procedure
To one drop of the vitamin A solution in a centrifuge tube add very little solid manganese dioxide. The test tube is placed in a water bath at 60-80” for at least 6 min with intermittent additions of a few drops of chloroform. For limit determination this period is increased to IO min. One to 2 ml of chloroform are then added and the solution well centrifuged. The clear solution is pipetted off and boiled down to I-Z drops; 2 drops of saturated o-aminophenol are then added; the solution heated for about IO set in a water bath followed by the addition of 5-6 drops of concentrated hydrochloric acid. A red colour depending on the concentration of the vitamin is obtained which is extractable in chloroform. A better separation of the colour is obtained if a few drops of water are added. Limit of identification:
4 ,ug vitamin A.
1: 12 500. The limit of identification was made on a standard solution of vitamin A the purity of which was determined by measuring the optical density of the solution at a wavelength of 324-326 m,u. The vitamin was found to be 77.7% pure. The limit of identification for vitamin A aldehyde (retinal) using the above procedure is 0.5 ,ug. This suggests that the conversion of the retinol to the corresponding aldehyde is not complete. A better sensitivity would therefore be obtained if complete oxidation of the retinol were achieved. With the above procedure the following results are obtained: Limit of dilution:
Vitamin 400 /G
A
COlOW deep violet red pink
40 iug 4 P”g
red
p-carotene
Colour
500 Leg 50 Pg
pale yellow pale yellow pale yellow
5 0%
A mixture consisting of a drop of 4 ,ug vitamin A in the presence of a drop of 500 pg B-carotene responds to the test indicating that 4 ,ug vitamin can be detected in the presence of 125 times its concentration of p-carotene. In addition to retinal the following E-B unsaturated aldehydes were treated with o-aminophenol as described above : acrolein, crotonaldehyde, tiglaldehyde, citral, z-hexen-r-al and cinnameldehyde. Only cinnameldehyde gave a reaction similar to retinal. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
One of us (O.T.) wishes to thank the Arts and Sciences Research Fund of the American University of Beirut for financial support. REFERENCES I F. SONDHEIMER,O.MANCERA,M.URQUI~AANDG.ROSENKRANZ,J. 4145. Clin.