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ANYL DIVISION OF ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY D. Duckworth, Program Chair
OTHER SYMPOSIA OF INTEREST:
Analytical Chemistry in Nuclear Technology (see NUCL, Sun, Mon)
Immunoassays and Other Bioanalytical Techniques (see AGRO, Tue)
Recent Advances in the Analysis of Environmental Contaminants in Foods and Feeds (see AGRO, Wed)
SOCIAL EVENTS: ANYL Dinner, 6 PM: Tue
BUSINESS MEETINGS: Business Meeting, 4 PM: Mon
SUNDAY MORNING
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm H
Beyond Quant: Re-envisioning the Foundational Course in Analytical Chemistry
C. T. Culbertson, K. Frederick, Organizers, Presiding
8:30 1. Desirable features of a foundational course in analytical chemistry. T.J. Wenzel
9:10 2. Producing market ready students: Quantitative Analytical Chemistry overhaul. C.R. Dockery, M.C. Koether, K.J. Linenberger, H.Z. Msimanga, W. Zhou
9:30 3. Trading burets for cuvets: What drives changes in quantitative analysis lab? C.D. King
9:50 Intermission.
10:00 4. Beyond quant: Supporting analytical chemistry’s third dimension. D.T. Harvey
10:20 5. Analytical method development as a focus for the foundational analytical course. K. Frederick, L. Quimby, M. Roca
10:40 6. Thinking bigger: Using student research and active-learning strategies in a two-course quantitative and instrumental analysis sequence. E.M. White, D.T. Miles
11:00 Discussion.
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Analytical Chemistry Applications in Pharmaceutical Sciences
J. F. Castner, Organizer, Presiding
8:25 Introductory Remarks.
8:30 7. Case studies in analytical chemistry best practices for pharmaceutical delivery devices designed to proactively address future regulatory landscape defined in proposed USP <661>, <1663>, and <1664> chapters. A.D. Hendricker, E.L. Carico, J.B. Dagger, D.D. Gilbert, L.B. Yu, J.D. Lennon
9:00 8. Analytical challenges to implement and use of USP as a guidance for confirmation and identification of trace level organic extractable components. G. Vas
9:30 9. Chemometric assessment of best practices for test procedures cited in USP updated chapters on extractables/leachables. J.F. Castner, M. Bresnick, M. Castner
10:00 Intermission.
10:15 10. Sub-PPM detection limits in powder X-ray diffraction guided by second harmonic generation imaging. G.J. Simpson
10:45 11. Development of a fast headspace GC method for determination of residual solvents in permethrin. J. Tian, A. Rustum
11:15 12. Development and validation of a stability-indicating UPLC method for the assay of imidacloprid and estimation of its related compounds. J. Tian, A. Rustum
11:45 Concluding Remarks.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm H
Beyond Quant: Re-envisioning the Foundational Course in Analytical Chemistry
C. T. Culbertson, K. Frederick, Organizers, Presiding
2:00 13. Quantitative analysis: Change the pedagogy not the content. D.A. Fry
2:20 14. Restructuring the quantitative analysis laboratory to allow for real world applications. K. Chichester, I. Kimaru, L. Donahue, M.C. Koether
2:40 15. Using reflective writing as an instrument to assess student learning in analytical chemistry. A.E. Witter
3:00 Intermission.
3:10 16. Mixed bag: A hodgepodge of quantitative analysis curriculum. C.E. Mactaylor
3:30 17. ANA-POGIL project: POGIL in analytical chemistry. J. Lantz, R.S. Cole
3:50 Discussion.
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Forced Degradations in Pharmaceutical Industry
H. Yarabe, Organizer, Presiding
1:25 Introductory Remarks.
1:30 18. Predictability of forced degradation studies for real world stability. S.W. Baertschi
1:55 19. Industry practices for conducting forced degradation studies: AstraZeneca’s approach. S. Marden, I. Ashworth, D. Benstead, E. Örnskov
2:20 20. Pharmaceutical photostability stress testing practice and case studies. G. Sluggett
2:45 21. Forced degradation in an over the counter cough syrup. D. Giamalva, J.L. Humphrey, V. Campbell
3:10 Intermission.
3:25 22. Leveraging the chemistry of drug degradation to support the structure elucidation process: Solid and liquid dosage form case studies. T.C. Zelesky
3:50 23. Development and validation of a novel stability-indicating reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography method for assay of milbemycin oxime and estimation of its related compounds. J. Huang, A. Rustum
4:15 24. Reduction of false positives in the peroxy radical based stress test. P. Harmon
4:40 Concluding Remarks.
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Informatics 2.0 for the Analytical Sciences: Big Data, the Semantic Web, and Metadata
S. J. Chalk, A. J. Williams, Organizers, Presiding
1:30 25. Driving needs for analytical data exchange standards and the potential impacts on the chemical sciences. A.J. Williams
2:00 26. AnIML: A new analytical data standard. S.J. Chalk
2:30 27. ChAMP, the Chemical Analysis Metadata Platform: Bringing analytical chemistry to the semantic web. S.J. Chalk, A. Williams
3:00 28. Before we can handle big data we need smarter data. P. Jones, D. Vanderwall
3:30 29. Utilization of multiple data points and data sources in the identification of unknowns. D. Hardy, V. Lashin, P. Russell, A. Gravel, A. Williams
4:00 30. Laboratory informatics environments: Why unified platforms and integration now? G.A. McGibbon, D. Hardy, R. Sasaki
Current Topics in Seed Treatment
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
SUNDAY EVENING
Section A
Boston Convention & Exhibition Center Hall C
General Analytical Posters
D. C. Duckworth, Organizer
6:00 - 8:00
31. Determination of individual C18 and C20 long chain base GM1 Gangliosides in a heterogeneous GM1 standard: Two strategies compared. A. Gobburi, R. Zhang, B. Willard, D. Inman, D.J. Anderson
32. Syntheses of lignin-derived dimers from thioacidolysis followed by Raney nickel desulfurization and their uses as GC quantitation standards. F. Yue, F. Lu, R. Sun, J. Ralph
33. Determination of thermally induced isomerization of phylloquinone using electrospray ion mobility time-of-flight mass spectrometry. P. Xiao, D. Song, H. Li
34. Evaluation of L-glutamide-derived supramolecular gel-forming organic phase in RP-HPLC. H. Noguchi, T. Charoenraks, M. Takafuji, H. Ihara
35. Performance attributes of HPLC as it relates to the separation of biocides. M.J. O'Leary, P.G. Alden
36. Evaluation of an LC-ESI-MS method for detection of sugars released after the enzymatic degradation of wood. S. Galster, C. Farrugia, R.E. Goacher
37. Multilayer microfluidic paper-based analytical device using pyrolyzed paper for electrochemical detection. E. Evans, J. Giuliani, E. Tavares da Costa, C.D. Garcia
38. Graphene-based sensor interface for DNA charge transfer. L. Lu
39. Imaging and sampling with nanopipettes. L.A. Baker
40. High-throughput microfluidic method to profile the dynamical properties of cellular reactions. C. Vyas, A. Lam, K. Long, B. Natarajan, H. Ma
41. Multiplexed, in-situ detection of protein binding on plasmonic microfluidic devices. J. He, M. Boegli, I. Bruzas, S. Unser, L. Sagle
42. Highly sensitive bacteria detection in large volume environmental sample by using graphene oxide coated microbeads. C. Baek, S. Chung, J. Min
43. Withdrawn.
45. Multiple reaction monitoring for targeted quantification of enzyme activities in proteome. S. Li, P. Diego, B. Bajrami, S.K. Keshipeddy, Y.W. Lam, B. Deng, V. Farrokhi, A. McShane, R. Nemati Josheghani, A.R. Howell, X. Yao
46. Preparation of glucuronic acid conjugate reference materials for paralytic shellfish toxins. P. Eangoor, A. Indapurkar, J. Knaack
47. Ultrasensitive and on-site detection of pathogens using Mag-LINA immunoassays. S. Ahmed, A. Abbas
48. Qualitative and semi-quantitative analysis of glycerolipids and phospholipids in algae scenedesmus dimorphus by multiple-precursor and neutral-loss scanning methods. S. Avula, J. Belovich, Y. Xu
49. Rapid quantification of entire phospholipid composition in hydrolyzed products of lecithin by P31-NMR. Y. Yang, R.D. Hiserodt, J. Li
50. MnO2 nanosheets based fluorescent sensing platform with organic dyes as probe with excellent analytical properties. C. Wang, L. Mao
51. Ligand-RNA interaction fluorescence indicator displacement assay inspiring the discovery of Tat antagonists. L. Qi, L. Zhang, H. Zhan, Y. Huo, J. Zhang, F. Dang, Z. Zhang
52. Simultaneous multiplexed cytokine analysis using semisynthetic aequorin fusion proteins. X. Yu, D. Scott, E. Dikici, S. Daunert
53. Intercalation of alkynylplatinum(II) terpyridine complexes into a helical structure poly(phenylene ethynylene sulfonate) and the application in protein sensing. S. Wang, J. Jiang, Z. Pan, K.S. Schanze
54. Analysis of carbohydrates in the atmosphere: Impact of Spring rain on bioaerosols in Iowa. C. Rathnayake, J. Kettler, T. Jayarathne, E.A. Stone
55. Exploration of high-resolution differential ion mobility spectrometry for large proteins. A.A. Shvartsburg
56. Oligomer molecular weight determination by advanced polymer chromatography system. H. Fang, P. Cui, Q. Wu, C. Qian
57. Study of the non-covalent interaction of aristolochic acid with proteins using fluorescence spectroscopy and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. W. Li, W. Chan
58. Understanding why semiconductive quantum rods have high energy transfer efficiency with firefly luciferase. L.M. Karam, K.J. Coopersmith, D.M. Fontaine, B.R. Branchini, M.M. Maye
59. Interactions of photosystem I with anionic peptides: A spectroscopic study. A. Stone, A. Sunda-Meya, N. Phambu
60. Biocatalytic cascades for the forensic determination of personal properties based on blood markers. J.M. Agudelo, J. Halamek, C. Huynh, E.K. Brunelle
61. Analysis of synthetic cathinones in oral fluid using stir bar sorptive extraction (SBSE) combined with direct analysis in real time–time of flight mass spectrometry (DART-TOFMS). K.M. Tully, B. Musselman, J.F. Morrison
62. Optimization of direct analysis real time–time of flight mass dpectrometry (DART–TOFMS) for the detection, characterization, and quantification of synthetic cathinones in oral fluid. H.S. Loring, B. Musselman, J.F. Morrison
63. Comparing solid-sampling instrumental methods to detect the enzymatic degradation of wood. C. Whitney, N. Zerby, R.E. Goacher
64. Comparative analysis of DRIFTS, ATR, and transmission FTIR sampling techniques for quantitative measurements on lignocellulose. M. Gogna, R.E. Goacher
65. Ultrasensitive detection of ribosomal RNA for monitoring of cyanobacteria. M.R. Hartman, B.P. Regmi, P. Ghatak, M.L. Richlen, D.M. Anderson, D.R. Walt
66. Analysis of total human urinary glycosaminoglycan disaccharides by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. X. Sun, L. Li, K. Overdier, L. Ammons, I. Douglas, C. Burlew, F. Zhang, E. Schmidt, L. Chi, R.J. Linhardt
67. Analytical methodologies to isolate and quantify free and liposomal bound doxorubicin from biological samples using LC-HRMS and LC-QQQ-MS. P. Sisco, K. Ahlschwede, J. Leakey, S. Linder
68. Multiclass drug and metabolite screen of 231 analytes by LC-MS/MS. S. Lupo, F. Carroll, S. Liang, T. Kahler, P. Connolly, R. Lake, R. Freeman, C. Sprout
69. Peptide immunoaffinity enrichment of cardiac troponin I by magnetic separation approaches for mass spectrometry-based quantification. N. Schneck, K. Phinney, S. Lee, M. Lowenthal
70. Novel real-time, mediator-free, non-enzymatic electrochemical biosensor for glutamate detection. Y. Yang, A. Manfredi, S. Daunert
71. Single-molecule multiplexed detection of proteins for early diseases detection. T. Dinh, D. Wu, D.R. Walt
72. Withdrawn.
73. Using anion-exchange chromatography coupled with high resolution accurate mass spectrometry for TCA pathway targeted metabolomics analysis. T. Christison, J. Wang, S.S. Hu, L. Lopez, Y. Huang
74. Novel antibody conjugated SERS probe for distinguishing cancer cells from normal cells. W. Qian, H. Zhao, X. Cao
75. Synthesis and electrochemical properties of biomass-derived nitrogen-rich carbon for electrochemical sensors. Y. Xu, L. Lu, P. Liu, Q. Hao
76. Hg2+ detection based on on-chip extraction and fluorescence quenching of BSA-stabilized Au nanocluster. I. Hsu, T. Shih, S. Tseng, Y. Yang, P. Chen, Y. Sun
77. Detection of designer drugs and relevant metabolites in raw sewage samples using high resolution mass spectrometry. M.R. Pruyn, P.R. Gardinali
78. Understanding the atmospheric pressure ionization of petroleum components: The effects of size, structure, and presence of heteroatoms. A. Huba, P.R. Gardinali
79. Novel enzyme-modified graphene nanosheet biosensors for the detection of pesticides. K. Morrisey, O. Kubesa, M.R. Hepel
80. Determination of pyrazole and pyrrole pesticides in environmental water samples by magnetic metal-organic framework (MOF) as a novel adsorbent coupled with high performance liquid chromatography. J. Ma, Z. Yao, L. Hou
81. Efficacy of a short conditioning step for eliminating carryover from SPME fibers. C. McGuire, E. Harrington, A. Anderson, M. Krisch
82. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analysis of neonicotinoids in environmental water. C. Hao, X. Zhao, L. Sui, D. Morse
83. New method for the determination of styrene oligomers from debris polystyrene and its application to coastline and ocean contamination. K. Koizumi, H. Sato, A. Okabe, B. Kwon, S. Chung, D.M. Karl, H. Katsura, K. Saido
84. Solid-phase microextraction of non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs using metal-organic framework polymeric monoliths as adsorbent. Y. Kuo, K. Wan, H. Huang
85. Non-invasive fecal analysis: A novel tool to assess environmental stress in aquatic and marine wildlife. C. Rolsky, R.U. Halden
86. Basmati or not basmati? That is the question. G. Cleland, A. Ladak, S. Lai, R. Stemmler, J. Burgess
87. LC-MS/MS analysis of pesticide residues in rice and unexpected detection of residues in an organic rice sample. D. Shah
88. Novel headspace gas chromatographic method for the determination of hydrogen peroxide residues in milk. H. Li, C. Du, M. Liu, H. Zhan
89. Tobacco-specific nitrosamines in the tobacco and mainstream smoke of U.S. commercial cigarettes. S.H. Edwards, L.M. Rossiter, K.M. Taylor, M.R. Holman, Y.S. Ding, C.H. Watson
90. Determination of unsulfonated aromatic amines in the color additives FD&C Yellow No. 5 and FD&C Yellow No. 6 using LC-MS/MS. N. Belai, S.R. White, B. Bowes
91. Colorimetric detection method for identification of fuels and post-combustion residues. Z. Li, M. Jang, K.S. Suslick
92. Column performance: Comparison of the superficially porous particle (SPP) to the fully porous particle (FPP). S. Lupo, S. Liang, F. Carroll, T. Kahler, P. Connolly, R. Lake, C. Sprout, R. Freeman
93. 21 Tesla Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer: A national resource for ultrahigh resolution mass analysis. C.L. Hendrickson, J.P. Quinn, N.K. Kaiser, D.F. Smith, G.T. Blakney, T. Chen, S.C. Beu, C.R. Weisbrod, A.G. Marshall
94. High resolution ion mobility separations in a cyclic structures for lossless ion manipulations module with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SLIM IMS/TOFMS). I.K. Webb, T. Chen, S. Garimella, A. Tolmachev, R. Norheim, S. Prost, G. Anderson, Y. Ibrahim, R. Smith
95. Extraction technique for the characterization of cross-linked films. S. Korf, D. Barsotti, M. Capistrano, M. Karalis, M. Lessik
96. Determination of the number of anion-exchange sites on a weak anion: Exchange HPLC column using frontal analysis. A. Gobburi, K. Pedada, H. Jogiraju, D.J. Anderson
97. Electroless plating as a flexible tool for the creation of custom surface enhanced Raman spectroscopic (SERS) substrates. B.I. Karawdeniya, Y. D. Y. Bandara, C. Masterson, B.D. Velleco, J. Whelan, J.R. Dwyer
98. Investigating the formation of polydichlorophosphazenes via NMR spectroscopy. J.A. Stiel, C. Tessier
99. Electronegativity is not a sufficient criterion for assigning 13C chemical shifts in halogenated benzenes. D.D. Clarke
100. New GFC columns for low noise MALS analysis. M. Turcotte, T. Matsui, R. Benson
101. Spectroelectrochemical modulation in a photoluminescent 1,8-anthraquinone-18-crown-5 host with select metal cation guests. D. Weatherman, A.G. Sykes
102. Influence of interfacial effects by PVDF on the fluorescent properties of Rhodamine 6. M.J. Mullen, M. Alhasani, M.A. Conrad, A. Gupta, W.B. Euler
103. Betaine based deep eutectic solvent: A promising green solvent for the future. S. Panda, R.L. Gardas
104. Substituent effects in synchronized π-π interactions. J. Carey, C. Chen
105. Speciation of Nb(V) and Ta(V) in alkaline media. G. Deblonde, A. Chagnes, G. Cote, A. Moncomble, N. Delaunay, C. Coelho-Diogo, C. Bonhomme
106. Effect of combi-2 on the structure and phase transitions of binary membrane systems: A spectroscopic study. B. Almarwani, A. Sunda-Meya, N. Phambu
107. Study of rhodamine 6G thin films on a glass substrate. M. Liu, E. Ortega, W.B. Euler
108. Development and application of a cost effective luminescence imaging system with high spatiotemporal resolution. A.S. Mathew, C.A. DeRosa, T.P. Butler, J.N. Demas, C. Fraser
109. Preparative chiral SFC of acidic compounds in Discovery Chemistry: From method development to multigram quantity scale-up. D. Wu, S. Yip, P. Li, D.Z. Sun, A. Mathur
110. From Afghanistan to space: Designing a novel microfluidic assay system to diagnose and stage protein energy malnutrition. K. Reed, J. Tsosie, M.E. Piyasena
111. Paper-based optical sensor as an end-of-service-life indicator for hydrogen cyanide. L. Greenawald
112. Fluorescent probe for sulfur dioxide derivative sulfite. K. Wang, H. Peng, A. Draganov, B. Wang
113. Spatial distribution of contact pin-printed features formed on oxidized porous silicon surfaces. S.G. Coombs, F.V. Bright
114. Single molecule assay development for breast cancer detection. S. Baig, S. Schubert, S.R. Walter, D.R. Walt
115. Ruthenium-modified aensitive NO aensors: Quantifying nitric oxide in the pathobiology of cystic fibrosis. T. Bose, T.L. Henderson, M. Bayachou
116. Examining third hand smoke from illicit drugs as a potential source of recoverable trace evidence. J.L. Bitter, M.E. Staymates, R.A. Fletcher, J.G. Gillen
117. Microcylinder sensors for the extracellular microenvironment. B. Gutierrez, R.J. White
118. Multimodal oxygen imaging utilizing dual emissive polymers and a CMOS camera. A.S. Mathew, C.A. DeRosa, G.M. Palmer, J.N. Demas, C. Fraser
119. Morphological transformation of bimetallic Au-Cu rods into spheres via galvanic replacement reaction by single particle spectroscopy. S. Thota, S. Chen, J. Zhao
120. Investigating the role of polytypism in the growth of multi-shell CdSe/CdZnS quantum dots by X-ray diffraction. K.L. Ryan, S. Majumder, M.M. Maye
121. LC/MS analysis of various anionic substances using polymer-based multimode column. M. Turcotte, J. Sasuga, S. Sakai, R. Benson
122. Chemical sensing with carbon materials. V. Kumar
123. Fabrication of chemical sensors containing micropatterns of templated noncovalently crosslinked N-isopropylacrylamide copolymers. C.J. Grenier, A. Timberman, R. Yang, J. Nelson, L. Deravi, W.R. Seitz
124. Automated structure verification in the pharmaceutical discovery open access environment. B.A. Becker
125. Determination of isomeric halogenated aromatic compounds using gas chromatography with flame ionization detector. C. Tsang
126. Analytical and synthetic studies on substituted cathinones: Bath salt-type aminoketone designer drugs. Y. Abiedalla, K. Abdel-Hay, J. DeRuiter, C.R. Clark
127. Analytical determination of trace level alkyl sulfonate esters genotoxic impurities in drug substances by using HPLC-HILIC-CAD. C. Tsang
128. Analysis of heparin derived tetrasaccharides by 2-aminoacridone labeling ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. X. Sun, L. Li, Y. Sun, L. Chi, R.J. Linhardt
129. LC-MS method development and MSn analysis of folic acid and Furosemide: Two FDA approved drugs. S. Bhattacharya, S.C. Roemer
130. Video rate polarization-modulation nonlinear optical microscopy for rapid analysis of pharmaceutically relevant crystals. G.J. Simpson
131. Confocal Raman spectroscopic microscopy tracks the penetration of two permeation enhancers in intact human skin ex vivo. Q. Zhang, Y. Pyatski, C.R. Flach, R. Mendelsohn
132. Quantitative HS-SPME measurements of bioactive sesquiterpene from Lychnophora ericoides (Vernonieae: Asteraceae). N.P. Lopes, D. Pavarini
133. Development of a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method for quantification of subtype-selective GABAa receptor ligands following liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and on-line solid-phase extraction (SPE). M.L. Guthrie, M.M. Poe, J.M. Cook, A. Arnold
134. Novel method for simultaneous detection in biosolids of 11 antibiotics of common use in human health and animal husbandry. H.Y. Done, R.U. Halden
135. New voltammetry interface for teaching in undergraduate analytical chemistry courses. D.B. Nuzzio
MONDAY MORNING
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm H
Addressing Challenges in Spectroscopy
G. Patonay, Organizer A. G. Cavinato, Organizer, Presiding
9:00 Introductory Remarks.
9:05 136. Using optical re-injection integrated cavity output spectroscopy to make simultaneous, airborne measurements of 13CH4 and CH3D isotopologues. J.P. Wilkerson, C. Healy, D. Sayres, J. Anderson
9:25 137. Automating the optimization of chromatographic selectivity using mobile phase pH for LC-UV-MS. A.B. Dlugasch, T. Wheat, P.R. McConville
9:45 138. Chromatographic mobile phases for combining detection with mass and UV spectra. A.B. Dlugasch, P.R. McConville
10:05 139. Modeling and quantitative decoupling nanoparticle near- and far-field effects on fluorophore fluorescence in solutions. D. Zhang
10:25 140. Development of a high-power pulsed laser for a two-photon LIF detection of tropospheric OH. R. Hannun, J.B. Smith, M.F. Witinski, J. Anderson
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Advances in Analytical Separations
J. L. Maclachlan, Organizer, Presiding
8:00 Introductory Remarks.
8:05 141. Chemical analysis of electronic cigarettes using solid phase microextraction and needle trap device coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. V. Niri, G. Peterson, A. Donahoe
8:25 142. Integrated microscale liquid chromatography: A new technique for improved sensitivity and reduced sample consumption in LC/MS peptide analysis. E.E. Chambers, M.E. Lame, M.S. Young
8:45 143. Determination of haloacetic acids in drinking water using 2D ion chromatography. C. Fisher, R. Lin, L. Lopez
9:05 144. Challenging separation of highly polar and ionic compounds using graphitic stationary phases in coupling with MS detection. C. Crescenzi, M. Rodriquez, P. Russo, A. Lapi
9:25 145. Fast ion chromatography-ICP-QQQ for arsenic speciation. B.P. Jackson
9:45 146. Detection of ppb levels of arsenic in beers and wines. J.N. Driscoll, J.L. Maclachlan
10:05 Intermission.
10:20 147. Development of charged surface solid-core stationary phases for optimal separations of small basic compounds and peptides. B. Okandeji, C. Boissel, M. Lauber, K.D. Wyndham, T. Walter, B.A. Alden, S.J. Shiner, D.P. Walsh, J.T. Cook, J.N. Fairchild
10:40 148. Novel HPLC-MS method for the detection of phosphorylated mono- and di-saccharides. C. Mathon, G. Barding, C.K. Larive
11:00 149. Chromatographic and electrophoretic separation of C-dots nanoparticles. L.A. Colon, Z. Xue, K. Tirado-González, A.C. Borges-Muñoz
11:20 150. Application of computer-assisted automated method development tools for HPLC method development for various pharmaceutical samples. S. Kumar, J. Zhuang, P. Zhang, J. Huang, A. Rustum
11:40 151. Exploring an achiral and chiral cross-linker by molecular imprinting using chromatographic and batch rebinding techniques. B. Hebert, D. Meador, D. Spivak
12:00 Concluding Remarks.
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Analytical Advances in Protein-DNA Thermodynamic Analysis
C. L. Baveghems, Organizer, Presiding
9:55 Introductory Remarks.
10:00 152. Toward benign, edible solar cells: Lessons from nature. C.V. Kumar
10:30 153. Conformational changes directed by site-specific binding of proteins to DNA. T. Record, R. Sengupta, M. Capp, I.A. Shkel, E. Ruff, R. Sreenivasan, M. Chhabra, M. Poulos, S. Wang, L. Felth, L. Bieter, E. Lingeman, Y. Zhang, I. Artsimovitch
11:00 Intermission.
11:15 154. Induced fit and the entropy of structural adaptation in the complexation of CAP and lambda-repressor with cognate DNA sequences. D.L. Beveridge
11:45 155. Dynamics of proteins on single stranded DNA. T.M. Lohman
12:15 Concluding Remarks.
Advances in Pesticide Residue Analysis: Innovations that Lead to Novel Applications
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
MONDAY AFTERNOON
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm H
Addressing Challenges in Spectroscopy
A. G. Cavinato, Organizer G. Patonay, Organizer, Presiding
2:00 Introductory Remarks.
2:05 156. Coupled UV-Vis/FT-NIR spectroscopy for in-situ analysis of multiple reaction steps during polymerizations. H. Aguirre Soto, J.W. Stansbury
2:25 157. New infrared library searching system for forensic automotive paint examination. B.K. Lavine, M.D. Allen, A. Weakley, M. Sandercock
2:45 158. Spectroscopic studies of near-infrared dye properties in confined spaces. G. Patonay, M. Henary, E. Lewis, G. Chapman
3:05 159. Correlation of IR spectra with thin film structure at solid-water interfaces. K. Hinrichs, A. Kroning, A. Furchner
3:25 160. Nitrogen Raman Spectroscopy as a tool for micro-scale pore size determination for carbon nanomaterials. P. Ray, L. Angela D., B. John V., V. Crespi, E. Xu
3:45 Intermission.
4:00 161. Use of an X-ray dispersion analyzer to study sedimentation patterns: Clay minerals as an example. G. Rytwo
4:20 162. X-ray excited luminescent chemical imaging (XELCI): Non-invasively imaging pH on the surface of implanted medical devices. J.N. Anker, F. Wang, Y. Raval, T. Tzeng
4:40 163. Rapid screening of Ti and Zn in commercial sunscreens using portable X-ray fluorescence analyzer. V. Bairi, J. Lim, I.R. Quevedo, T. Mudalige, P. Howard, S. Linder
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Advances in Analytical Separations
J. L. Maclachlan, Organizer, Presiding
2:00 Introductory Remarks.
2:05 164. Analysis of metals at sub ppb levels by HG-GC-PID. J.N. Driscoll, J.L. Maclachlan
2:25 165. General static-headspace gas chromatographic method for determination of residual ethylene oxide and other impurities in polyethylene glycols. J. Huang, A. Rustum
2:45 166. High throughput headspace sampling system. B. Van Deren, T. Scherbart
3:05 167. Monitoring ppt levels of BTEX with a field portable GC-PID. J.N. Driscoll, J.L. Maclachlan
3:25 168. New portable electrochemical analyzer and ion chromatograph for simultaneous in-situ analysis of marine waters and sediments. D.B. Nuzzio, M. Taillefert, J. Beckler
3:45 Intermission.
4:00 169. Investigating the molecular contribution to adaptive coloration in cephalopods. S.F. Jones-Labadie, T. Williams, C. DiBona, M.A. Griswold, L.F. Deravi
4:20 170. Development of phage-conjugated magnetic probes for bacterial separation. J. Chen, B. Duncan, L. Wang, V.M. Rotello, S.R. Nugen
4:40 171. In-tube microextraction: Simplest possible headspace microextraction for capillary electrophoresis. S. Cho, D.S. Chung
5:00 Closing Remarks.
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Analytical Advances in Protein-DNA Thermodynamic Analysis
C. L. Baveghems, Organizer, Presiding
1:30 172. DNA-recognition by RcnR/CsoR repressor proteins – contributions of conformation and wrapping to high-affinity binding. P.T. Chivers
2:00 173. Effect of pH on complex stability: Protein-protein vs. protein-DNA. A.V. Onufriev
2:30 174. Structure-based mechanisms of recognition and specificity in protein-DNA interactions. Y. Li, A. Moreno, V. Birdsall, V. Deng, J. Knee, M. Hingorani, I. Mukerji
3:00 Intermission.
3:15 175. Nanoscale hydrodynamic study of proteins under thermal agitation and electrostatic field. Y. Zhang
3:30 176. Artificial histone complexes: Cationized glucose oxidase as a DNA digital switch. C.L. Baveghems, C.V. Kumar
3:45 177. Innovative advances in isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC). F. Wiebke
Advances in Pesticide Residue Analysis: Innovations that Lead to Novel Applications
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
Undergraduate Research Posters
Analytical Chemistry
Sponsored by CHED, Cosponsored by ANYL and SOCED
MONDAY EVENING
Section A
Boston Convention & Exhibition Center Hall C
Sci-Mix
D. C. Duckworth, Organizer
8:00 - 10:00
34, 40-41, 50, 53, 55, 60-61, 65, 67-70, 73, 79-80, 86, 91, 101, 103, 106, 108, 115, 121-123, 125-126, 133. See previous listings.
TUESDAY MORNING
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Innovations in Analytical Chemistry and Their Application to National Security and Forensics (CBRNE)
Analytical and Chemometric Methods for Chemical Attribution
H. Cho, J. R. Cort, C. Fraga, Organizers D. Wunschel, Presiding
8:30 Introductory Remarks.
8:40 178. Accomplishments and goals of DHS S&T Chemical Forensics Program. R. Bull
9:05 179. Analyses at the Swedish Defence Research Agency of authentic CB-samples from national and international incidents. C. Astot, S. Fredriksson, R. Norlin, J. Rattfelt Nyholm, L. Rittfeldt, R. Magnusson, C. Nilsson
9:30 180. Sourcing of sarin and nitrogen mustard chemical agents through impurity profiling and stable isotope ratios. C. Fraga, J.J. Moran, B.P. Dockendorff, K. Bronk
9:55 Intermission.
10:20 181. Holding studies on crude samples of Russian VX for chemical attribution signature (CAS) determination. S. Hok
10:45 182. Investigation of the organic and inorganic chemical attribution signatures of fentanyl. A. Vu, A. DeHope, A.M. Williams
11:10 183. Identification of chemical signatures attributable to strychnine sources using chemometric predictive modeling of a fused GC-MS, LC-MS, ICP-MS, and FTIR dataset. M.W. Gardner, A.R. Smith, C.J. Krueger, T.E. Manley, M.A. Reaves
11:35 184. Forensic signatures for source attribution of cyanides using impurity profiling, stable isotope ratios, and chemometrics. N. Mirjankar, C. Fraga
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
2015 ACS Analytical Division Award Symposium
S. J. Olesik, Organizer, Presiding
8:25 Introductory Remarks.
8:30 185. Interfacing analytical and organic chemistry to create sensitive, selective, and simple point-of-need assays. S.T. Phillips
9:00 186. Transdermal hydrogen sensing for monitoring biodegradable magnesium biomedical implants. W.R. Heineman, T. Wang, D. Zhao, Z. Dong
9:30 187. EXCEL spreadsheets as platforms to teach so many things in analytical chemistry. P.K. Dasgupta, A.F. Kadjo
10:00 188. Infrared matrix-assisted laser desorption electrospray ionization: From fundamentals to chemical and molecular imaging. D.C. Muddiman
10:30 189. Bioelectrochemistry: Understanding the interface between the electrode and the biological milieu. G.S. Wilson
11:00 190. Appearances can be deceiving: Spectrochemical analysis applied to contact lens-mediated ocular surface phenomena. F.V. Bright, I.J. Horner, J.J. Hurst, N.D. Kraut, J.F. Destino, C.M. Collado, G.E. Atilla-Gokcumen
11:30 Concluding Remarks.
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Advanced Analytical Techniques for Early Cancer Screening
C. Burton, Organizer Y. Ma, Organizer, Presiding
8:25 Introductory Remarks.
8:30 191. Phenotyping of early stage ovarian cancer by mass spectrometry imaging and untargeted metabolomics. F.M. Fernandez, D. Gaul, C. Jones, M. Monge, M.R. Paine, L.Q. Tran, J.F. McDonald
9:00 192. Serum metabonomics for detection of early stage ovarian cancer. T.A. Szyperski, K. Odunsi, E. Garcia, D. Sukumaran, V. Karambizi, T. Zinger, A. Yilmaz, R. Hageman Blair, J. Miecznikowski, M. Heiler, J. O'Brien
9:30 193. Metformin acts to disrupt mitochondrial-associated metabolic homeostasis in human cancer. X. Liu, E. Lengyel, I. Romero, J.W. Locasale
10:00 Intermission.
10:15 194. Metabolite profiling of the rat gut. C.K. Larive, M. Dinges, C. Lytle
10:45 195. Discovery and development of a blood based protein signature to guide patient treatment decisions in Prostate Cancer. From analytical evaluation to potential clinical utility. S. Pennington
11:15 196. Urinary pteridine detection and normalization for early cancer detection. Y. Ma, C.F. Burton, H. Shi
11:45 197. Ultrasensitive diagnostic immunoarray platform for the assessment of aggressive vs non-aggressive forms of prostate cancer. A. Joshi, M. Sharafeldin, B.A. Otieno, C. Krause, G. Bishop, C. Dixit, J. Rusling
12:05 Concluding Remarks.
Academic Innovations for Tomorrow’s Industries: GSSPC Symposium
Sponsored by CHED, Cosponsored by ANYL‡, BIOL‡, BIOT‡, BMGT‡, CORP‡, DAC‡, ENFL‡, PHYS‡ and POLY‡
Antibiotics, Pharmaceuticals, Personal Care Products: Fate, Treatment, Analysis, and Ecological Effects
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
TUESDAY AFTERNOON
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Innovations in Analytical Chemistry and Their Application to National Security and Forensics (CBRNE)
Sampling, Detection, and Sourcing of Chemical and Biological Threat Agents
J. R. Cort, D. Wunschel, Organizers C. Fraga, Organizer, Presiding
1:30 Introductory Remarks.
1:40 198. Measurement of site-specific 13C/12C stable isotope ratios from 13C satellite peaks in 1H NMR spectra. J.R. Cort, H. Cho, P.A. Kempler, A.E. Metaxas, J.C. Schultz
2:05 199. COTS products for the collection of chemical threat agents. E. Durnal, K. Brady
2:30 200. Ricin forensic profiling approach based on complex sets of biomarkers. S. Fredriksson, D. Wunschel, S. Wiklund Lindstroem, C. Nilsson, K. Wahl, C. Åstot
2:55 Intermission.
3:20 201. Mass spectrometry-based methods for the analysis of protein toxins. J.R. Barr, S. Kalb, A.E. Boyer
3:45 202. Strategies for the detection of biological toxins in food. S.A. Khan, W.L. Stutts, A.M. Knolhoff, T.R. Croley
4:10 203. Proteomic characterization of B. anthracis spore biomass produced on laboratory and soil media. D. Wunschel
4:35 204. Influence of long-term laboratory cultivation on protein expression by environmental isolates of Yersinia pestis. B. Kaiser, E. Merkley, O. Leiser, A. Lin, J. Foster, D. Wagner, P. Keim, H. Kreuzer
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Micro and Nanoscale Innovations in Chromatography
S. J. Olesik, Organizer, Presiding
2:00 205. Self-tuning nanogels for adaptable selectivity in biomolecule separations. L.A. Holland
2:30 206. Microfluidic devices integrating solid-phase extraction, fluorescent labeling and electrophoresis. A. Woolley, S. Kumar, M. Sonker, V. Sahore, R. Knob
3:00 207. Quantitative analysis of drug-protein interactions by micro high performance affinity chromatography. D. Suresh, Z. Li, D.S. Hage
3:30 208. Sustainable chromatography and mass spectrometry using nanoscale materials. S.J. Olesik, M. Beres, M.C. Beilke
4:00 209. Acoustofluidic cell differentiation for diagnostic applications. M.E. Piyasena, R. Gurung, G. Gautam, S. Cox
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Advanced Analytical Techniques for Early Cancer Screening
Y. Ma, Organizer C. Burton, Organizer, Presiding
1:15 Introductory Remarks.
1:20 210. Inkjet-printed gold nanoparticle sensors for ultrasensitive detection of parathyroid hormone related peptide (PTHrP) in breast cancer. B.A. Otieno, C. Krause, B. Ochietti, R. Kremer, J. Rusling
1:40 211. Development of serum-based single molecule assays for the early detection of cancer. S. Schubert, S. Baig, S.R. Walter, L. Arendt, M. Palacios, D.R. Walt
2:00 212. Noninvasive detection of cancer biomarkers using a new sampling device for exhaled breath analysis. P. Benedetti, E. Guerriero, C. Crescenzi
2:20 213. Ultrasensitive microfluidic immunoarray for serum pro-inflammatory cytokines and C-reactive protein to assess oral mucositis risk in cancer patients. B.A. Otieno, C. Krause, G. Bishop, L. Choquette, R. Lalla, D. Peterson, J. Rusling
2:40 214. PHOTON for real-time sensing and imaging of rare-subsets of single cancer stem cells in heterogeneous tumor cells. X.N. Xu, P. Cherukuri, P. Songkiatisak, S. Warren, T. Huang
3:00 Intermission.
3:15 215. Detection of cancer biomarkers in serum using a hybrid mechanical and optoplasmonic nanosensor. P.M. Kosaka, V. Pini, J. Ruz, R. da Silva, M. Ujue, D. Ramos, M. Calleja, J. Tamayo
3:35 216. Paper based chemiluminescence immunoPAD: Rapid detection of multiple cancer biomarker proteins using magnetic beads with automated sample processing. C.K. Tang, A. Vaze, J. Rusling
3:55 217. Paper/PMMA hybrid microfluidic microplate for disease biomarker detection. S. Sanjay, M. Dou, X. Li
4:15 218. New stochastic sensors based on nanostructured materials for fast screening of biological fluids for cancer biomarkers. R.I. Stefan
4:35 Concluding Remarks.
Section D
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm H
ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry: Symposium in Honor of John R. Yates III
J. R. Yates, Organizer C. E. Costello, Presiding
1:30 Introductory Remarks.
1:35 219. High resolution analysis of receptor tyrosine kinase signaling networks. F.M. White
2:10 220. Qualitative and quantitative determinations of disease-related post-translational modifications to proteins. C.E. Costello, J. Zaia, C. Lin, M.E. McComb
2:45 221. Chemoproteomic interrogation of small molecule inhibitors in vivo. J.A. Marto
3:20 222. Systematic exploration of the human interactome. E.L. Huttlin, L. Ting, R. Bruckner, F. Gebreab, M. Gygi, J. Szpyt, S. Tam, G. Zarraga, G. Colby, K. Baltier, V. Guarani, L.P. Vaites, R. Rad, B.K. Erickson, R.A. Obar, T. Harris, S. Artavanis-Tsakonas, M.E. Sowa, J.A. Paulo, J.W. Harper, S.P. Gygi
3:55 223. Award Address (ACS Award in Analytical Chemistry sponsored by Battelle Memorial Institute). Using mass spectrometry to understand cystic fibrosis as a protein misfolding disease. J.R. Yates, S. Pankow, C. Bamberger
4:40 Concluding Remarks.
Academic Innovations for Tomorrow’s Industries: GSSPC Symposium
Sponsored by CHED, Cosponsored by ANYL‡, BIOT‡, BMGT‡, CORP‡, DAC‡, ENFL‡, PHYS‡ and POLY‡
Antibiotics, Pharmaceuticals, Personal Care Products: Fate, Treatment, Analysis, and Ecological Effects
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
Immunochemistry Summit XII: Immunoassays and Other Bioanalytical Techniques
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL, ENVR and SCHB
WEDNESDAY MORNING
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Innovations in Analytical Chemistry and Their Application to National Security and Forensics (CBRNE)
New Methods in Detection and Analysis
H. Cho, D. Wunschel, Organizers J. R. Cort, Organizer, Presiding
8:30 224. Infrared imaging and multivariate curve resolution for the forensic examination of automotive paints. B.K. Lavine, M.D. Allen, K. Nishikida, M. Sandercock
8:50 225. Strontium isotope ratios of hair for human provenancing. B. Tipple, T. Chau, L. Chesson, J. Ehleringer
9:10 226. Real-time, ultrasensitive detection of RDX vapors using conjugated network polymer thin films. W. Dichtel, D. Gopalakrishnan
9:30 227. Effect of environmental conditions on the stability of trace explosives. M. Najarro, E. Sisco, J. Lawrence
9:50 228. DHS Chemical Forensics Program - REACTS. K. Brady, E. Durnal
10:10 Intermission.
10:25 229. Monitoring ppt levels of toxic contaminants with a field portable GC-PID. J.N. Driscoll, J.L. Maclachlan
10:45 230. Biomarker analysis via bioaffinity cascades in forensic analysis. J.M. Agudelo, C. Huynh, E.K. Brunelle, J. Halamek
11:05 231. Pairing glycopolymers and surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) for the detection of toxic lectins. V. Szlag, M. Styles, A. Campos, D. Sprouse, B. Wagh, C.L. Haynes, T.M. Reineke
11:25 232. Development of a spectroscopy-based smart device for the rapid detection of organic molecules of environmental, health concern and security features interest. A. Ghauch, A. Ammouri
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Nanotechnology for Analytical Sensing and Spectroscopy Based Applications
SERS and Raman Spectroscopy
R. Narayanan, Organizer J. S. Shumaker-Parry, Presiding
9:30 233. Nanoparticle labeling strategies as tools for the early diagnosis of infectious disease. M.D. Porter
10:00 234. Identifying uranium speciation in environmental samples using Raman and SERS. G. Lu, T. Forbes, A. Haes
10:30 235. Tailored silicon nitride thin-films for optical and all-electronic chemical sensing. B.I. Karawdeniya, Y. D. Y. Bandara, J. Whelan, C. Masterson, B. Velleco, J.R. Dwyer
11:00 236. Solution-based SERS method for detection of trace levels of pesticides. R. Narayanan
11:30 237. Weak distance dependence in Raman enhancement of raspberry-like metamolecule dimers. Z. Qian, S. Park, Z. Fakhraai
12:00 238. SERS metabolic profiling: A novel multiplexing platform for infectious disease diagnosis and cancer cell identification. Y. Chen, R. Premasiri, L. Ziegler
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Analytical Advances in Mass Spectrometry
A. A. Shvartsburg, Organizer, Presiding
8:40 Introductory Remarks.
8:45 239. Ion utilization efficiency: An effective way to compare different ESI-MS interfaces. K. Tang
9:10 240. Atomic force microscope tip enhanced laser ablation mass spectrometry. K.K. Murray, S. Ghorai, C.A. Seneviratne
9:35 241. Novel strategy for reduction of matrix effects of anionic compounds by paired ion electrospray ionization (PIESI) mass spectrometry. H. Guo, Z.S. Breitbach, D.W. Armstrong
10:00 242. Development of surface acoustic wave nebulization as an ion source. D.R. Goodlett
10:25 Intermission.
10:40 243. Development of an ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometer array. S. Park, G. Anderson, J.D. Chavez, J.E. Bruce
11:05 244. Strategies for the gas-phase oxidation of polypeptide ions to [M-H]+, [M+H+O]+, and M+● cations via ion/ion reactions. A. Pilo, J. Bu, S.A. Mcluckey
11:30 245. Combining old-school and state of the art techniques to mass spectral characterization of complex mixtures. A.C. Stenson, T.A. Brown, C.B. Henderson, B. Bythell, B. Ruddy
11:55 246. Monoisotopic proteomics. R. Zubarev
Recent Advances in the Analysis of Environmental Contaminants in Foods and Feeds
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Open Air Analytical Measurements for Forensics, Health and Homeland Security
A. Hall, B. Musselman, Organizers, Presiding
1:25 Introductory Remarks.
1:30 247. "Pick your Poison": Recent developments in the analysis of natural and "unnatural" drugs of abuse by DART-MS. R.B. Cody, R. Musah, A. Lesiak, J. Shepard
1:55 248. Detecting drugs and chemical agents in biological samples by paper spray mass dpectrometry: Applications and new developments. N.E. Manicke, C. Zhang, B.J. Bills, R. Potter
2:20 249. Isobaric drug analyses using direct analysis in real time (DART) and hydrogen/deuterium exchange. W.D. Hoffmann, G.P. Jackson
2:45 250. Evaluation of direct analysis in real time–time of flight mass dpectrometry (DART–TOFMS) for the analysis of synthetic cathinones in oral fluid. J.F. Morrison, H.S. Loring, K.M. Tully, B. Musselman
3:10 Intermission.
3:25 251. Screening for phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor (PDE-5) contaminants in herbal supplements and extracts using direct analysis in real time ambient ionization system. B. Musselman, R. Goguen, J. Lapointe
3:50 252. High pressure handheld mass spectrometry. K. Gregory
4:15 253. Combining molecular and atomic ambient ionization technologies for complete sample characterization. K. Evans-Nguyen, A. Windom, S. Manolakos, T. Evans-Nguyen
4:40 254. Ambient mass spectrometry with macro- and microplasmas. F.M. Fernandez, J. Keelor, M.C. Bernier, K. Benham, T.M. Orlando, P.B. Farnsworth
5:05 Concluding Remarks.
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Nanotechnology for Analytical Sensing and Spectroscopy Based Applications
Fluorescence and Luminescence
R. Narayanan, Organizer, Presiding
2:00 255. DNA hybridization assay on cellulose paper using upconversion nanoparticles as donors in luminescence resonance energy transfer. F. Zhou, U.J. Krull
2:30 256. Chemiluminescence reagent/catalyst dual-functionalized graphene hybrids and their analytical applications. H. Cui, D. Liu, X. Liu, X. Yu, G. Li
3:00 257. Ratiometric fluorescence transduction of nucleic acid hybridization on a paper-based platform using a digital camera and immobilized quantum dots as donors in fluorescence resonance energy transfer. O. Noor, U.J. Krull
3:30 258. Nanoparticle supported ratiometric fluorescent indicators for polar organics based on non-covalently crosslinked molecular imprinting technology. R. Yang, C.J. Grenier, J. Csoros, W.R. Seitz
4:00 259. One-tube fluorescence quantification of biological targets using structure switching aptamers. H. Kallewaard, K. Plaxco
4:30 260. Innovative ratiometric fluorescent Cu(II) indicator based on the poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) phase transition. F. Wang, R. Ding, T. Williams, W.R. Seitz, R.P. Planalp, L. Nyiranshuti, J. Massing
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
Analytical Advances in Mass Spectrometry
A. A. Shvartsburg, Organizer, Presiding
1:40 261. Emerging approaches for the purification and tandem MS characterization of disease-related biopolymers. M.E. McComb, C. Lin, J. Zaia, C.E. Costello
2:05 262. Conservation of ion mobility derived collisional cross section (CCS) values of ions using LC and GC TOF-MS. L. Mullin, G. Cleland, M. McCullagh
2:30 263. Enabling large-scale discovery, Characterization and quantitation of neuropeptides via tandem mass spectrometry. L. Li
2:55 264. Shotgun proteomics of Staphylococcus aureus protein extracts towards MALDI-TOF MS-based S. aureus identification. B. Wex, D.B. Awad, S. Tokajian
3:20 Intermission.
3:35 265. Determination of hormones in fish muscle tissue using APPI-LC-MS/MS. P. Chu, S. Sklenka
4:00 266. Quantitative proteomics for understanding post-translationally modified proteins and proteomes. B. Garcia
4:25 267. High throughput top-down proteomics for characterizing proteoforms with post-translational modifications. S. Wu
4:50 268. Global analysis of N-sialoglycosylated proteins on the cell surface by integrating click chemistry and MS-based proteomics. R. Wu
Recent Advances in the Analysis of Environmental Contaminants in Foods and Feeds
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
THURSDAY MORNING
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Challenges in Bioanalytical Chemistry
J. Wang, Organizer, Presiding
8:25 Introductory Remarks.
8:30 269. Microtechnologies to interrogate signaling in single cells. N.L. Allbritton
9:00 270. Quantifying protein expression in single cells. S.R. Walter, S. Schubert, M. Manesse, D.R. Walt
9:20 271. Imaging the local tensors of collagen by nonlinear optical Stokes ellipsometric microscopy. X. You, E. DeWalt, P. Schmitt, G.J. Simpson
9:40 272. Paramagnetic NMR probe to study RNA-protein binding. L.M. Seebald, C.M. DeMott, A. Shekhtman, M. Royzen
10:00 273. Cholesterol Regulation of Granule Exocytosis in Platelets. S.A. Finkenstaedt-Quinn, S.M. Gruba, C.L. Haynes, S. Ge
10:20 Intermission.
10:35 274. Collection and content analysis of tear film. S. Shippy, V. Avilov, Q. Zeng
10:55 275. Characterizing cyclooxygenase oxidation of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) by LC-QToF-MS and LC-MS/MS: An alternative lipid signaling pathway? A. Rand, T. Cajka, B. Barnych, S. Lee, O. Fiehn, B.D. Hammock
11:15 276. Direct cell wall imaging by Scanning Transmission X-ray Microscopy (STXM) reveals leading role for lignin-modifying enzymes on ensuing xylanases. R.E. Goacher, D. Jeremic, R. Yan, C. Karunakaran, E. Master
11:35 277. Comparison of RP-HPLC methods to measure adenosine amounts in mouse brain. D.D. Smith, H. Roundtree, T. Simeone, K. Simeone
11:55 Concluding Remarks.
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Nanotechnology for Analytical Sensing and Spectroscopy Based Applications
Biological Applications
R. Narayanan, Organizer J. R. Dwyer, Presiding
9:00 278. Direct aminoglycoside coated gold nanoparticles synthesis, Characterization and antibacterial susceptibility testing. S. Tockstein, T. Modi, R. Dakshinamurthy
9:30 279. Optical sensing using DNA-encapsulated silver clusters. J.T. Petty, M. Ganguly, O. Sergev
10:00 280. DNA-functionalized metal oxide nanoparticles as highly sensitive and selective biosensors for arsenate and hydrogen peroxide. J. Liu, B. Liu
10:30 281. Diazonium functionalization of nanowire mechanical resonator biosensors for improved stability. W. Zheng, S. Evoy
11:00 282. Beyond the detection limit of PCR: Direct quantification of BCR-ABL fusion gene using AFM force mapping. Y. Lee, J. Park
11:30 283. Multipurpose application of Sacha inchi (Plukentia volubilis L.) plant: Panacea from the Andean region. B. Kumar, L.H. Cumbal, A. Debut
Section C
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm G
New Developments and Applications of Electrochemistry
D. C. Duckworth, S. H. Pratt, Organizers S. A. Bryan, Presiding
8:25 Introductory Remarks.
8:30 284. Up-regulation of quorum sensing molecules for early and rapid electrochemical detection of bacterial pathogens. H.J. Sismaet, T.A. Webster, E.D. Goluch
8:50 285. Engineering bacteriophages to develop electrochemical biosensors for bacterial pathogens. S.D. Alcaine, J. Chen, D. Wang, S.R. Nugen
9:10 286. DNA Mikado: Effects of mismatches and DNA bending upon thermal hybridization behavior on gold electrodes. G. Flechsig, K. Biala, M. Mix
9:30 287. Gold nanoparticle chemiresistor arrays for molecular sensing. E. Chow, B. Raguse, L. Wieczorek, K. Muller, J. Cooper, L. Hubble, A. Sosa Pintos
9:50 288. Unusually high heterogeneous electron transfer activity of carbon nanotube-supported reduced graphene oxide. X. Mao, F. Guo, E. Yan, G.C. Rutledge, T. Hatton
10:10 289. Investigation on the electrochemistry of atom-thick graphene nanoelectrode. H. Luo
10:30 Intermission.
10:45 290. Paper-based electroanalytical devices for in situ and cell-based biosensing. L. Sun, X. Lin, H. Gu, N. Bao
11:05 291. Nanoscale redox titrations for the quantification of surface photocatalytic intermediates at operating water-splitting photoanodes. B.H. Simpson, X. Zhou, Z. Gossage, J. Rodriguez Lopez
11:25 292. Browser based electrochemical instruments. D.B. Nuzzio
11:45 293. Trace detection of manganese using cathodic stripping voltammetry with an indium tin oxide working electrode coated with a charge selective polymer film. C.A. Rusinek, A.F. Bange, I. Papautsky, W.R. Heineman
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
Section A
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Atlantic Blrm 1
Challenges in Bioanalytical Chemistry
J. Wang, Organizer, Presiding
1:55 Introductory Remarks.
2:00 294. Sensitive and selective detection of point mutations using single molecule arrays. B.P. Regmi, M.R. Hartman, D.R. Walt
2:30 295. Withdrawn.
2:45 296. Rapid 2D and 3D imaging by Lissajous beam-scanning microscopy. J.A. Newman, S.Z. Sullivan, R. Muir, S. Sreehari, C.A. Bouman, G.J. Simpson
3:00 297. Butyrylcholinesterase extraction efficiency comparison between protein-G agarose spin columns and protein-G magnetic beads. A. Indapurkar, P. Eangoor, J. Knaack
3:15 298. Chemiluminescent labels released from long spacer arm-functionalized magnetic beads: A novel strategy for enhanced detection of nucleic acids. H. Yang, N. He, Z. Li
3:30 Intermission.
3:45 299. Reversible and selective luminescent determination of ClO-/H2S redox cycle in vitro and in vivo. F. Liu, S. Sun
4:00 300. Peptide aptamer-based detection of food-borne bacterial toxin. F. Dudak, I.H. Boyaci
4:15 301. Optical multiplexed diagnostic platforms for small molecule analysis based on site-encoded DNA strategies. M. Marco
4:30 302. Flexible protein polymerization enhances immunoassay signals. C. Chen, Y. Chu, H. Lin, J. Carey
4:45 303. Magnetic beads-based chemiluminesent assay enables ultrasensitive quantification of microRNA. Z. Li, H. Yang, N. He
5:00 Concluding Remarks.
Section B
Renaissance Boston Waterfront Pacific Blrm F
Nanotechnology for Analytical Sensing and Spectroscopy Based Applications
Other Sensing and Spectroscopy
R. Narayanan, Organizer A. Haes, Presiding
1:30 304. Aluminum plasmonic antennas based on a modified nanosphere template lithography process. J.S. Shumaker-Parry, M. Swartz, M. Rodriguez, S. Blair
2:00 305. Analytical applications of ionic liquids and GUMBOS. I.M. Warner, N. Siraj, N. Speller, I. Galpothdeniya
2:30 306. Non-invasive implantable system based on core-shell microcapsules for glucose sensing. X. Xie, D.G. Anderson
3:00 307. Naked-eye detection of a single foodborne pathogen using plasmonic colorimetry. M.N. Bui, A. Abbas
3:30 308. Rapid, nanoscale chemiresistive vapor sensors. K. Fu, B. Willis
4:00 309. Study of ligand-induced cell signaling through the use of dissipation monitoring of the QCM-D. J.Y. Chen, M. Garcia, L.S. Penn, J. Xi
4:30 310. Withdrawn
Data to Decisions: Software Solutions for Modern Analytical Workflows
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL and ENVR
Structure Elucidation in Metabolism Studies: Plant, Animal, and Soil
Sponsored by AGRO, Cosponsored by ANYL