AI Article Synopsis

  • Metabolic profiling of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) holds potential for understanding brain diseases by minimizing ex vivo metabolism during sampling.
  • The study aimed to determine how temperature, centrifugation, and the addition of ethanol affect the concentration of various amines in CSF samples.
  • Results showed that most amines are stable during sampling as long as samples are cooled and processed quickly, though the impact of ethanol on more unstable metabolites requires further research.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Metabolic profiling of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is a promising technique for studying brain diseases. Measurements should reflect the in vivo situation, so ex vivo metabolism should be avoided.

Objective: To investigate the effects of temperature (room temperature vs. 4 °C), centrifugation and ethanol, as anti-enzymatic additive during CSF sampling on concentrations of glutamic acid, glutamine and other endogenous amines.

Methods: CSF samples from 21 individuals were processed using five different protocols. Isotopically-labeled alanine, isoleucine, glutamine, glutamic acid and dopamine were added prior to sampling to trace any degradation. Metabolomics analysis of endogenous amines, isotopically-labeled compounds and degradation products was performed with a validated LC-MS method.

Results: Thirty-six endogenous amines were quantified. There were no statistically significant differences between sampling protocols for 31 out of 36 amines. For GABA there was primarily an effect of temperature (higher concentrations at room temperature than at 4 °C) and a small effect of ethanol (lower concentrations if added) due to possible degradation. -phosphoethanolamine concentrations were also lower when ethanol was added. Degradation of isotopically-labeled compounds (e.g. glutamine to glutamic acid) was minor with no differences between protocols.

Conclusion: Most amines can be considered stable during sampling, provided that samples are cooled immediately to 4 °C, centrifuged, and stored at - 80 °C within 2 h. The effect of ethanol addition for more unstable metabolites needs further investigation. This was the first time that labeled compounds were used to monitor ex vivo metabolism during sampling. This is a useful strategy to study the stability of other metabolites of interest.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5838118PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11306-018-1333-0DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

endogenous amines
12
glutamic acid
12
cerebrospinal fluid
8
vivo metabolism
8
room temperature
8
temperature 4 °c
8
glutamine glutamic
8
isotopically-labeled compounds
8
sampling
6
amines
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!