Quantitative profiling of tryptophan metabolites in serum, urine, and cell culture supernatants by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry

Journal Article (2011)
Author(s)

W.T. Zhu

A.P. Stevens

K. Dettmer

E. Gottfried

S. Hoves

M. Kreutz

E. Holler

A.B. Canelas

I. Kema

P.J. Oefner

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© 2011 Springer-Verlag
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Publication Year
2011
Copyright
© 2011 Springer-Verlag
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Abstract

A sensitive, selective, and comprehensive method for the quantitative determination of tryptophan and 18 of its key metabolites in serum, urine, and cell culture supernatants was developed. The analytes were separated on a C18 silica column by reversed-phase liquid chromatography and detected by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry in positive ion multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode, except for indoxyl sulfate which was measured in negative ion MRM mode in a separate run. The limits of detection and lower limits of quantification were in the range of 0.1–50 and 0.5–100 nM, respectively. Fully 13C isotope-labeled and deuterated internal standards were used to achieve accurate quantification. The applicability of the method to analyze serum, urine, and cell culture supernatants was demonstrated by recovery experiments and the evaluation of matrix effects. Precision for the analysis of serum, urine, and cell culture supernatants ranged between 1.3% and 16.0%, 1.5% and 13.5%, and 1.0% and 17.4%, respectively. The method was applied to analyze changes in tryptophan metabolism in cell culture supernatants from IFN-?-treated monocytes and immature or mature dendritic cells.

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