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Steven A. Cohen

Researcher at Millipore Corporation

Publications -  19
Citations -  4978

Steven A. Cohen is an academic researcher from Millipore Corporation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amino acid & Derivatization. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 19 publications receiving 4820 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven A. Cohen include Wilmington University & Waters Corporation.

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Rapid analysis of amino acids using pre-column derivatization.

TL;DR: The derivatization method is rapid, efficient, sensitive, and specific for the analysis of primary and secondary amino acids in protein hydrolyzates and the liquid chromatographic system allows for the rapid, bonded-phase separation with ultraviolet detection of the common amino acids.
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Synthesis of a fluorescent derivatizing reagent, 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidyl carbamate, and its application for the analysis of hydrolysate amino acids via high-performance liquid chromatography.

TL;DR: A highly reactive amine derivatizing reagent, 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidyl carbamate, has been synthesized in a rapid, one-step procedure to form stable unsymmetric urea derivatives which are readily amenable to analysis by reversed phase HPLC.
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Amino acid analysis utilizing phenylisothiocyanate derivatives.

TL;DR: Using phenylisothiocyanate as the reagent, detection limits under 1 pmol can be routinely achieved, allowing the analysis of submicrogram protein samples, giving the analyst the first realistic alternative to ion-exchange analysis without compromising desirable features of the traditional methodology.
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PITC derivatives in amino acid analysis

TL;DR: Refined methods for separating PTC-amino acids on reverse phase columns may pose a challenge to traditional ion exchange techniques.
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A new, rapid, high-sensitivity analysis of amino acids in food type samples.

TL;DR: A new approach to the analysis of free amino acids and amino acids from hydrolyzed foods is described, based on reaction of thefree amino acids with phenylisothiocyanate to form stable derivatives which are subsequently separated by liquid chromatography.