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Measurement and Standards for Chemical and Biochemical Analysis Hratch G. Semerjian Director, CSTL NRT November 29, 2001 Washington, DC Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory NBS was established in 1901 “The necessity (for standards) had become imperative as science and industry, ready to take giant steps in the new century, looked for better measurements and more uniformity, precision, and control in the laboratory, factory, and plant.” Measures for Progress – a History of NBS Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory CSTL Vision A world class research laboratory recognized by the Nation as the primary resource for chemical, biomolecular, and chemical engineering measurements, data, models, and reference standards required to enhance U.S. industrial competitiveness in the world market. CSTL Mission As the Nation’s Reference Laboratory, CSTL’s Mission is to provide the chemical measurement infrastructure to: • enhance U.S. industry's productivity and competitiveness; • assure equity in trade; and • improve public health, safety, and environmental quality. Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Measurement Standards Establish CSTL as the pinnacle of the national traceability and international comparability structure for measurements in chemistry, chemical engineering and biotechnology, and provide the fundamental basis of the nation’s measurement system Chemical and Process Information Assure that U.S. industry has access to accurate and reliable data and predictive models to determine the chemical and physical properties of materials and processes Measurement Science Anticipate and address next generation measurement needs of the nation, by performing cutting-edge research Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory CHEMICAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY LABORATORY ORGANIZATION CHART Hratch G. Semerjian, Director William F. Koch, Deputy Director Biotechnology Process Measurements Surface & Microanalysis Science Physical & Chemical Properties Analytical Chemistry G. Gilliland, Chief J. Whetstone, Chief R. Cavanagh, Chief M. Haynes, Chief W. May, Chief • Fluid Flow • Fluid Science • Process Sensing • Thermometry • Pressure and Vacuum • Thermal and Reactive Processes • Atmospheric Chemistry • Microanalysis Research • Surface Dynamical Processes • Analytical Microscopy • DNA Technologies • Bioprocess Engineering • Structural Biology • Biomolecular Materials • BioInformatics • Experimental Kinetics & Thermodynamics • Chemical Reference Data & Modeling • Computational Chemistry • Experimental Properties of Fluids • Theory & Modeling of Fluids • Cryogenic Tech. • Spectrochemical Methods • Organic Analytical Methods • Gas Metrology & Classical Methods • Molecular Spectroscopy & Microfluidic Methods • Nuclear Methods Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory NIST Standards for Chemical Measurements Chemical standards constitute 686 of ~1,400 NIST SRM types, and more than 16,000 of nearly 32,000 NIST SRM Units Sold in FY01 • • • • High Purity Neat Chemicals Organic Calibration Solutions Inorganic Calibration Solutions Gas Mixture Standards • • • • • • • • Complex Matrix Standards Advanced Materials Biological Fluids/Tissues Foods/Botanicals Geologicals Metal Alloys Petroleum/Fossil Fuels Sediments/Soils/Particulates • Optical Filter Standards • Conductivity Standards • Ion Activity Standards Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Industrial and Analytical Instruments and Services Traditional partners … for dissemination of M&Ss Standard Reference Data: compiled … evaluated … traceable NIST Chemistry WebBook (on-line) • Data for ~40,000 species • New enthalpy of fusion database • New fluid property models and capabilities • User Profile: 80,000 hits per month NIST Mass Spectral Library (CD) • World’s most widely used MS library • Evaluated spectra for 108,000 compounds • Total of 138,000 spectra • New automated methods of evaluation • Extend applications to MS/MS • Installed on >3000 instruments per year Expert Analytical Systems: • X-ray Spectrometry Simulation with DTSA Additional database releases in FY 01: • • • • NIST/TRC Vapor Pressure DB NIST/TRC Database - recommended values Chemical Kinetics DB - online version XPS DB - online version 3.0 FY 01 Outputs: Items Directly Sold: 584 Distributor Sales: 3,972 Customers served: > 400,000 (includes web customers) Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Analytical Database for OPCW • Tool for directed verification of compliance under the Chemical Warfare Convention • Automatic Mass Spectral Deconvolution and Identification Software for use by OPCW for detecting CW and CW related compounds in treaty inspections • High quality data includes: infrared spectra, retention data for GC, and mass spectral data • Database compares GC/MS experimental data with spectral library, using established and novel algorithms NIST scientists provide training in the use of SRDs and associated software systems. One such system, coupled to a GC/MS is designed specifically for field detection and identification of chemical warfare agents, and will be utilized for verification of compliance to the CWC. The United States is one of 143 signatory parties to the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), a global treaty that bans chemical weapons. US companies engaged in activities involving certain chemicals may be required to submit reports to the Department of Commerce and may be subject to inspection by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), the international body that administers the Chemical Weapons Convention. SARIN Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory NIST Quantitative Infrared Database SRD 79 – FTIR Database • CD released Oct 1998 with absorption coefficient data for 21 compounds • FY 01 additional 19 on web • Digital signature to ensure file integrity New Driver - GCC: Supply spectra for ~ 50 global warming gases Future Plans • Interactive, web-based FTIR calibration NIST Quantitative Infrared Database (SRD 79) −1 1.2e-3 −1 Absorption coefficient in base 10 (µmol/mol) m Continuing Plan: Supply spectra for ~ 100 of EPA’s 189 HAPs Resolution: 0.125 cm−1 Apodization: 3-Term Blackman-Harris Methanol 1.0e-3 8.0e-4 6.0e-4 4.0e-4 2.0e-4 0.0e+0 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 −1 Wavenumber (cm ) • Data at several resolutions and apodization functions • Traceable to NIST primary gas standards Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Environmental Technologies Global Market for Environmental Technologies Estimated at $530 Billion Standard Reference Data Standard Reference Materials FTIR Database Catalysts REFPROP Sediments, and Dust Acid Rain Emissions Trading Catalyst Poisoning Source Apportionment Fossil Fuels Gas Mixtures Standards for Proficiency Testing Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory NIST/EPA Proficiency Testing of Environmental Laboratories CSTL, NVLAP, EPA, state and local governments, and private sector laboratories working together to establish a proficiency testing system for waste water and drinking water testing NIST / CSTL Reference Materials Accreditation QA Oversight Commercial and State Proficiency Testing Providers (10-30) PT Services Approximately 6000 Environmental Laboratories •• Issued Issued NIST NIST 150-19: 150-19: Chemical Chemical Calibration Providers Calibration - Providers of of Proficiency Proficiency Testing Testing •• Received Received 12 12 applications applications for for Testing Testing Providers Providers •• Producing Producing primary primary benchmark benchmark materials materials where where SRMs SRMs are are not not available available –– to to provide provide infrastructure infrastructure and and primary standards needed primary standards needed to to audit audit commercial PT samples commercial PT samples –– to to assist assist providers providers in in value value assigning assigning their their PT PT materials materials Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Healthcare Measurements Healthcare costs amount to ~ 14% of the GDP, an estimated $1.5 trillion Diagnosis Prevention Folic Acid Binding Protein Treatment/Therapy + 1 ++ 3 2 + 5+ + + + ++ 4 + + 6 7 + + Nutrition + + + 8 ++ 9 + CSTL Maintains and Refines Definitive Methods for 12 Health Status Markers Calcium Chloride Cholesterol Creatinine Glucose Lithium Magnesium Potassium Sodium Triglycerides Urea Uric Acid Cancer, Blood Clotting Kidney Function Heart Disease Kidney Function Diabetes Antipsychotic Treatment Heart Disease Electrolyte Balance Electrolyte Balance Heart Disease Kidney Function Gout PSA New Driver EC IVD Directive requires that all IVD products sold in Europe must show “traceability to standards of a higher order”. 1 Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Healthcare Measurements … supporting the national reference system for healthcare NIST SRMs provide anchor for CAP evaluations: • the peer group for grading and regulatory purposes • an accuracy-based assessment for SRMs medical utility for nine analytes CAP NIST Micronutrients QA Program: • efficacy of nutrition in disease prevention Program Participants • 60 labs worldwide – fee supported Continuous interactions with: >60 Laboratories Worldwide • CDC, NCCLS, AACC, NCI, AdvaMed Expanded collaboration with: Micronutrients QA • NIH, FDA, CDC Utilize core expertise to support an ever-changing range of needs Academia Industry Government Areas of core expertise: • Toxic inorganics – increased needs (Hg and Cd) • Small organic markers – standards in place, measurement bias effects under study jointly with Mayo clinic to determine impact on medical decision-making • Protein-based markers – increased need • Electrolytes – standards in place at currently acceptable levels • DNA-based markers – increased need Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Healthcare Measurements New Drivers: EU IVD Directive and International Trade Establish Reference Systems for New Clinical Markers - Highest Priorities Troponin-I Glycated Hemoglobin Homocysteine Bilirubin TSH Speciated Iron Human Serum Alb. PSA Cadmium & Mercury Cortisol Thyroxine Folates Myocardial Infarction Diabetes Status Risk of Heart Disease Liver Function Thyroid Function Hemochromatosis, Anemia Renal Failure Prostate Cancer Toxic Metal Poisoning Endocrine Function Thyroid Function Neural Tube Defects Glycated Hemoglobin Hemoglobin C2838H4416N768O794S16 glucose C6H12O6 Needs Assessment: IVD Workshop (Industry Driven), November 2000 Follow-on Workshop, June 2002 Leading Global effort to address EU IVD Directive: • ~100 well-defined chemical species on “A list” • NIST to provide reference methods and SRMs for ~40% • NMIs in EU, Japan and Australia to provide reference methods and CRMs for rest • Mutual recognition of reference methods and CRM assigned values under discussion • Work independently, and develop basis for recognition, OR • Work jointly – HOWEVER issues of intellectual property are unresolved Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Healthcare Measurements NIST/ NCI Biomarker Validation Laboratory EDRN Network: Supports development and implementation of high-throughput biomarker analysis through technical evaluations NIST technical expertise: molecular cytogenetics, genotyping, sequence analysis, mitochondrial DNA sequencing, oxidative DNA damage and MALDI-TOF high-throughput genotyping “One of the major challenges is finding ways to bring the physics and engineering communities together with biologists and clinicians productively”. George Whitesides excerpt from Workshop Report Validation Studies: Active: Chromosomal Hotspots and Cancer Risk Pending: High Throughput Analysis of Serum Telomerase Community Building: NCI/NIST Workshop on Nanotechnology in Early Detection of Cancer Workshop, held Aug 2001 Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Food and Nutrition … current activities AOAC nine-sectored triangle 100% Fat + in Pr ote 0% ++ rb. Ca + + + 3 2 + 5+ 100% Carb. ++ 0% 1 4 + + + + + 6 7 + + 8 0% Fat ++ 9 + 1100% Protein Needs Assessment: Interaction initiated in 1997 as a result of US FDA study regarding implementation of Nutritional Labeling and Education Act Populating the AOAC Food Triangle Sector 1 Cholesterol and Fat-Soluble Vitamins in Coconut Oil, SRM 1563 Sector 2 Baking Chocolate Sector 3 Peanut Butter, proposed Sector 4 Meat Homogenate, SRM 1546 Sector 5 Baby Food Composite, SRM 2383 Sector 6 Frozen Diet, SRM 1544, Infant Formula, SRM 1846, Typical Diet, SRM 1548a Sector 7 Frozen Spinach, SRM 2385 Juncture, Fish Tissue, SRM 1946 Sectors 4,8,9 AOAC International requested 1-2 reference materials in each sector of the nine-sectored triangle Quality Assurance: Interlaboratory comparisons Food SRMs facilitate: • compliance with nutritional labeling laws • traceability for food exports needed for international trade • the provision of accurate labeling information involve 20 laboratories from NFPA, plus other collaborating labs AOAC food triangle populated with appropriate standards to meet current needs – shifting emphasis to new issues such as efficacy and purity of Nutraceuticals Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Food and Nutrition Nutraceuticals New Market • Total market of herbal supplements & functional foods estimated at $26B • Market for Botanicals (herbal supplements) estimated at $3.5 B Drivers: • AOAC technical Division on Reference Materials identified nutraceuticals as their highest priority need • NIH concerned about efficacy (active ingredients) and contamination issues (such as heavy metals and pesticides) • FDA requested that NIST develop reference materials for seven herbal supplements: St. John’s Wort, saw palmetto, Gingko Biloba, milk thistle, echinacea, valerian, and feverfew Timeline FY 02 - FY 04 • Obtain botanical raw materials and prepare candidate materials (2-3 per year) • Develop and validate reference methodology • Certify SRMs for active compounds, and contaminants Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Food and Nutrition Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) Reference Methods and Standards for GMOs Developing reference methods for detection of: • genetic modification of foods • proteins expressed by the genetic modification Needs Assessment: NIST sponsored workshop to be held in December 2001 with representation from the EU, Asia-Pacific Rim, and all five subregions within the Americas (SIM), to discuss: • Regulatory differences • Existing measurement methods • Gap analysis • Plan of action Current Activities with USDA/GIPSA – Biotech Grains • Material (biocrops) transfer agreement complete • Preliminary round-robin indicated the lowest level of “Round-Up Ready” trait that can be detected by PCR • Joint workshop/survey with GIPSA to fine-tune standards needs • Develop candidate reference material with input from USDA, plant genomic testing labs, seed producers, suppliers of reagents and other materials used in testing protocols • Clone PCR products generated from trait materials into plasmid vectors for DNA sequencing • Vectors will serve as positive controls for detecting specific traits in biotech grain Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory … current activities • • • • DNA Standards for Human Identity Testing Standards for Alcohol and Drugs of Abuse Testing Handgun and Explosives Residue Testing Measurements & Standards for Chemical Weapons Treaty Implementation • Chemical and Biological Agent Detection Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Forensics Standards to Support Crime Scene Investigations Alcohol and Drugs of Abuse Testing • Long term commitment to develop and maintain SRMs for instrument calibration and/or method validation associated with urine and hair testing, and evaluation of products used to screen substances for illicit drug content • Over last decade a series of human urine based SRMs were developed and released • Two new “drugs of abuse” in human hair SRMs will be developed and certified for ten drugs of interest - to be released in 2002 • Investigating the measurement of chiral drugs in hair (example: chiral separations required to distinguish illicit form of methamphetamine from the legal form found in “over-the-counter” health products) Organic Residue Analysis to investigate handgun and explosives crime scenes • Develop new measurement technology, and investigate standards issues for the detection of handgun and explosives crime Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Forensics Standards for Human Identity Testing NIST SRMs Provide Accuracy Base for DNA Measurements Release of SRM 2390: First DNA Profiling standard (1992) R & D 100 Award Release of SRM 2391: First PCR-based DNA Profiling Standard (1995, renewal in 2000) STR Database: Additional support provided with Short Tandem Repeat DNA Internet Database Release of SRM 2392: First Mitochondrial DNA standard for: human mtDNA sequencing, forensic ID, medical diagnosis, mutation detection (2000) New Release in 2002: SRM 2395 ,Y-Chromosome Microsatellites Complete: Methods evaluated, screened DNA extracts for potential inclusion in SRM Plan: Sequence all Y-SRT loci, type all components for at least 20 Y-STR and 5Y-SNP loci High throughput methods: MALDI-TOF sequencing of SNPs Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Forensics (with potential homeland security applications) • MALDI – TOF (Matrix Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization – Time of Flight) Mass Spectrometer for identification of bacterial agents – for implementation of Chemical Weapons Convention • Flow, particle analysis, vapor measurement for gas mask penetration • Critical evaluation of field methods and protocols to be used in on-site inspections – direct technical support for US Delegation to OPCW • AMDIS (Automatic Mass Spectral Deconvolution and Identification Software) for use by OPCW for detecting CW and CW related compounds in treaty inspections • Insure high quality data for OPCW database including: infrared spectra, retention data for GC, and mass spectral data • Forensic analysis using isotopic signatures to ascertain origin • Microarrays and microanalytical devices for detection of chemical and biological agents • MS database for identification of targeted chemical warfare agents • Analysis of high explosive particles by SIMS • Analysis of explosive residues to identify source • DNA fingerprinting for identification of microorganisms Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory Selected Examples of NIST Capabilities to Support Homeland Security Detection: chemical, biochemical, radiological, nuclear and explosive detection (CBRNE), forensic analysis and physical screening, lab-on-a-chip technologies, X-ray security technology Preparedness: cyber-security, protective equipment for emergency responders, materials and ballistic testing, reduce building vulnerability to CBR attacks Prevention: biometric recognition technologies for human ID, sterilization of biological agents in mail Protection: building and fire research for physical infrastructure security, protocols and tests to protect integrated buildings and services, IT infrastructure security, detection of concealed weapons, detection of explosive devices and other materials Response and Recovery: forensic DNA analysis, support containment and removal of CBRNE agents, IT security, support testing laboratories to respond to increased demands, sterilization of biological agents in mail Chemical Science and Technology Laboratory