Thermal degradation of metabolites in urine using multiple isotope-labelled internal standards for off-line GC metabolomics - effects of injector and oven temperatures.

J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci

Department of Food Science, Agro Food Park 48, Aarhus N 8200, Denmark; CiFOOD, Centre for Innovative Research, Aarhus University. Agro Food Park 48, 8200 Aarhus N, Denmark; CBIO, Centre of Circular Bioeconomy, Blichers Allé 20, Tjele 8830, Denmark. Electronic address:

Published: September 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Thermal processes are essential in metabolomics and small molecule analysis, particularly using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS) for tasks like derivatization and ionization.
  • An optimized derivatization protocol with multiple isotope labelled internal standards was successful in analyzing various metabolites from pooled urine samples, while also showcasing the impact of GC methods on metabolite thermal stability and MS signal suppression.
  • Utilizing an extended temperature ramp in GC led to improved metabolite stability and chromatographic separation, emphasizing the importance of proper sampling and heating regulation in GC metabolomics, along with the recommendation for multiple internal standards.

Article Abstract

Thermal processes are widely used in small molecule chemical analysis and metabolomics for derivatization, vaporization, chromatography, and ionization, especially in gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC/MS). An optimized derivatization protocol has been successfully applied using multiple isotope labelled analytical internal standards of selected deuterated and C selected compounds, covering a range of different groups of metabolites for non-automated GC metabolomics (off-line). Moreover, the study was also realized in a pooled urine sample, following metabolic profiling. A study of thermal degradation of metabolites due to GC inlet and oven programs (fast, slow) was performed, where the results indicated that both GC oven programs (fast and slow) negatively affected the thermal stability of the metabolites, while the fast-ramp GC program also suppressed MS signals. However, the use of multiple internal standards can overcome this drawback. The application of extended temperature ramp GC program presented identical behaviour on metabolite stability and better chromatographic separation combined with much lower signal suppression, compared to a short temperature ramp program. No effects were observed for organic acids, fatty acids, sugars and sugar alcohols, while significant differences were observed for amino acids. GC metabolomics is a strong tool that can facilitate analysis, but special attention is required for sampling handling and heating, before and during the GC analysis. The use and application of multiple multi-group internal standards is highly recommended.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jchromb.2021.122902DOI Listing

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