Literature DB >> 21953953

The role of liquid chromatography and flow injection analyses coupled to isotope ratio mass spectrometry for studying human in vivo glucose metabolism.

Jean-Philippe Godin1, Trent Stellingwerff, Lucas Actis-Goretta, Anne-France Mermoud, Sunil Kochhar, Serge Rezzi.   

Abstract

Under most physiological conditions, glucose, or carbohydrate (CHO), homeostasis is tightly regulated. In order to mechanistically appraise the origin of circulating glucose (e.g. via either gluconeogenesis, glycogenolysis or oral glucose intake), and its regulation and oxidation, the use of stable isotope tracers is now a well-accepted analytical technique. Methodologically, liquid chromatography coupled to isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LC/IRMS) can replace gas chromatography coupled to combustion-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) for carrying out compound-specific (13)C isotopic analysis. The LC/IRMS approach is well suited for studying glucose metabolism, since the plasma glucose concentration is relatively high and the glucose can readily undergo chromatography in an aqueous mobile phase. Herewith, we report two main methodological approaches in a single instrument: (1) the ability to measure the isotopic enrichment of plasma glucose to assess the efficacy of CHO-based treatment (cocoa-enriched) during cycling exercise with healthy subjects, and (2) the capacity to carry out bulk isotopic analysis of labeled solutions, which is generally performed with an elemental analyzer coupled to IRMS. For plasma samples measured by LC/IRMS the data show a isotopic precision SD(δ(13)C) and SD(APE) of 0.7 ‰ and 0.001, respectively, with δ(13)C and APE values of -25.48 ‰ and 0.06, respectively, being generated before and after tracer administration. For bulk isotopic measurements, the data show that the presence of organic compounds in the blank slightly affects the δ(13)C values. Despite some analytical limitations, we clearly demonstrate the usefulness of the LC/IRMS especially when (13)C-glucose is required during whole-body human nutritional studies.
Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21953953     DOI: 10.1002/rcm.5179

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom        ISSN: 0951-4198            Impact factor:   2.419


  2 in total

1.  Position-specific 13 C/12 C analysis of amino acid carboxyl groups - automated flow-injection analysis based on reaction with ninhydrin.

Authors:  Brian Fry; James F Carter; Keita Yamada; Naohiro Yoshida; Dieter Juchelka
Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom       Date:  2018-06-30       Impact factor: 2.419

2.  Natural carbon isotope abundance of plasma metabolites and liver tissue differs between diabetic and non-diabetic Zucker diabetic fatty rats.

Authors:  Jean-Philippe Godin; Alastair B Ross; Marilyn Cléroux; Etienne Pouteau; Ivan Montoliu; Mireille Moser; Sunil Kochhar
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-09-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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