Literature DB >> 11428634

Diagnosis and dosimetry of exposure to sulfur mustard: development of a standard operating procedure for mass spectrometric analysis of haemoglobin adducts: exploratory research on albumin and keratin adducts.

D Noort1, A Fidder, A G Hulst, L P de Jong, H P Benschop.   

Abstract

Experiments were carried out to develop a standard operating procedure for analysis of sulfur mustard adducts to the N-terminal valine in haemoglobin and to explore adduct formation with albumin and keratin. In the first approach, gas chromatography-negative chemical ionization/mass spectrometry (GC-NCI/MS) of the thiohydantoin sample subsequent to the modified Edman degradation was performed using a thermodesorption/cold trap (TCT) injection technique (detection limit for in vitro exposure of human blood to sulfur mustard: 30 nM). In the second approach, the crude thiohydantoin sample was purified by solid-phase extraction procedures. In the third approach, the procedure was shortened significantly by performing the Edman degradation for 2 h at 60 degrees C. Upon exposure of human blood to various concentrations of [14C]sulfur mustard, ca. 20% was covalently bound to albumin. One of the tryptic fragments (T5 containing an alkylated cysteine (HETE-(A-L-V-L-I-A-F-A-Q-Y-L-Q-Q-C-P-F-E-D-H-V-K); MW 2536 Da) could be detected sensitively with liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry analysis (detection limits: > or =15 pg absolute and 1 microM for in vitro exposure of human blood). Upon exposure of human callus (suspensions in 0.9% NaCl; 500 mg ml(-1)) to various concentrations of [14C]sulfur mustard we found 15-20% of the added radioactivity covalently bound to keratin. Upon incubation with base, 80% of the bound radioactivity was split off as [14C]thiodiglycol. This result opens the way for sensitive mass spectrometric detection of sulfur mustard exposure of skin by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry of (derivatized) thiodiglycol.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11428634     DOI: 10.1002/1099-1263(200012)20:1+<::aid-jat676>3.0.co;2-f

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Toxicol        ISSN: 0260-437X            Impact factor:   3.446


  4 in total

1.  Synthesis of different glutathione-sulfur mustard adducts of verified and potential biomarkers.

Authors:  Andreas Bielmann; Nicolas Sambiagio; Nathalie Wehr; Sandrine Gerber-Lemaire; Christian G Bochet; Christophe Curty
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 4.036

2.  Biomonitoring Human Albumin Adducts: The Past, the Present, and the Future.

Authors:  Gabriele Sabbioni; Robert J Turesky
Journal:  Chem Res Toxicol       Date:  2016-12-18       Impact factor: 3.739

Review 3.  Quo vadis blood protein adductomics?

Authors:  Gabriele Sabbioni; Billy W Day
Journal:  Arch Toxicol       Date:  2021-11-13       Impact factor: 5.153

4.  Four sulfur mustard exposure cases: Overall analysis of four types of biomarkers in clinical samples provides positive implication for early diagnosis and treatment monitoring.

Authors:  Hua Xu; Zhiyong Nie; Yajiao Zhang; Chunzheng Li; Lijun Yue; Wenfeng Yang; Jia Chen; Yuan Dong; Qin Liu; Ying Lin; Bidong Wu; Jianlin Feng; Hua Li; Lei Guo; Jianwei Xie
Journal:  Toxicol Rep       Date:  2014-08-13
  4 in total

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