Salting-out assisted liquid-liquid extraction for UPLC-MS/MS determination of bile acids and kynurenine-, indole- and serotonin-pathway metabolites of tryptophan in human serum of healthy probands
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The bacterial composition of the gut has been found to affect many diseases, including several gastrointestinal cancers. The microbiome appears central in the production of certain metabolites that enter circulation, especially those from bile acids and the essential amino acid tryptophan. The tumor-microenvironment may also produce changes in metabolites, such as those from the tryptophan-kynurenine pathway, of which several compounds may be measured in the blood. As data emerges from large scale metabolomics studies, there will be a need to validate metabolomic biomarkers to confirm their clinical utility. This task also requires knowledge about biological variation of the same metabolites in a healthy population. For this purpose, a novel method was developed for quantification of bile acids and tryptophan metabolites in samples of human serum by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. Salting-out assisted liquid-liquid extraction was optimized with the ion-pairing reagent trifluoroacetic acid. In this way, both polar tryptophan metabolites and non-polar bile acids could be extracted with a high recovery, favorable matrix effects, and improved chromatographic focusing, by using straightforward robot pipetting. The instrumental analysis was fast (4 min and 32 s) and with sample injections done directly from the extraction microplate. The method was applied to quantify metabolites in serum from healthy probands, and for investigating inter- and intraindividual variations over six hours.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Chromatography B publishes papers on developments in separation science relevant to biology and biomedical research including both fundamental advances and applications. Analytical techniques which may be considered include the various facets of chromatography, electrophoresis and related methods, affinity and immunoaffinity-based methodologies, hyphenated and other multi-dimensional techniques, and microanalytical approaches. The journal also considers articles reporting developments in sample preparation, detection techniques including mass spectrometry, and data handling and analysis.
Developments related to preparative separations for the isolation and purification of components of biological systems may be published, including chromatographic and electrophoretic methods, affinity separations, field flow fractionation and other preparative approaches.
Applications to the analysis of biological systems and samples will be considered when the analytical science contains a significant element of novelty, e.g. a new approach to the separation of a compound, novel combination of analytical techniques, or significantly improved analytical performance.