| Literature DB >> 24958388 |
Catarina Silva1, Carina Cavaco2, Rosa Perestrelo3, Jorge Pereira4, José S Câmara5.
Abstract
For a long time, sample preparation was unrecognized as a critical issue in the analytical methodology, thus limiting the performance that could be achieved. However, the improvement of microextraction techniques, particularly microextraction by packed sorbent (MEPS) and solid-phase microextraction (SPME), completely modified this scenario by introducing unprecedented control over this process. Urine is a biological fluid that is very interesting for metabolomics studies, allowing human health and disease characterization in a minimally invasive form. In this manuscript, we will critically review the most relevant and promising works in this field, highlighting how the metabolomic profiling of urine can be an extremely valuable tool for the early diagnosis of highly prevalent diseases, such as cardiovascular, oncologic and neurodegenerative ones.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24958388 PMCID: PMC4018671 DOI: 10.3390/metabo4010071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1Classification of microextraction techniques (METs).
Figure 2Properties of commercially available SPME fibers (adapted from [31]). CW/TPR, carbowax/templated resin; PEG, polyethylene glycol; PDMS, poly(dimethylsiloxane); DVB, divinylbenzene; PA, polyacrylate; CAR, carboxen.
Figure 3Simplified flowchart for MEPS sorbents selection. The parameters used were the matrix properties (aqueous or organic), the polarity and solubility of the target analytes (soluble in water or organic solvents) and the extraction mode (reverse-phase (RP), ion-exchange (IE) or normal-phase (NP)). Adapted from [9]. APS, AminoPropyl Siloxane; AX, Anion eXchange; CX, Cation eXchange; HDVB, Highly cross-linked polystyrene DiVinylBenzene; PEP, Polar Enhanced Polymer; SAX, Strong Anion eXchange; SCX, Strong Cation eXchange; SDVB, polyStyrene DiVinylBenzene.
Figure 4Most influent parameters in MEPS and SPME optimization.
A comparison of some characteristics of target sample preparation techniques with solid phase extraction procedures. Reviewed in [11,36].
| Factor | MEPS | SPE | SPME |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sorbent amount | 0.5–4 mg | 50–2,000 mg | 150 mm Thickness |
| Sample preparation time | 1–2 min | 10–15 min | 10–40 min |
| BIN (Barrel insert and needle) use | 40 to 100 extractions | Single use | 50–100 extractions |
| Sample throughput | low | high | high |
| Recovery | good | good | low |
| Sensitivity | good | good | low |
| Carryover | low | high | high |
| Cost | low | high | high |
Figure 5Comparison of the main aspects of the most common biological matrices.
Representative reports using MEPS and SPME methodologies in the characterization of target urinary metabolites.
| Target diseases or analytes | LOD | LOQ | Analytical method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (ng·mL−1 by default) | ||||
| F2-Isoprostanes (oxidative damage biomarker) | - | - | SPE/LC-MS | [ |
| - | - | SPE/GC-MS | [ | |
| a-KG, L-CAR and acetyl-L-CAR (cardiac cell metabolism) | - | 0.04–0.08 | SPME/LC-MS | [ |
| Aliskiren, prasugrel and rivaroxaban | - | 0.5–5.0 pg·mL−1 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Pravastatin and pravastatin lactone | 1.5 nM | 5 nM | SPME/LC-MS | [ |
| Stimulants and β-blockers | 0.1–1.2 | - | SPME/LC-MS | [ |
| Acebutolol and metoprolol | - | 1.0 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Propranolol | 4–7 | 13–20 | SPME/CEC | [ |
| Verapamil, propranolol and metoprolol | - | - | MEPS/µPESI-MS/MS | [ |
| Verapamil, gallopamil, norverapamil | 52–63, 5–8 | - | SPME/LC-UV (LC-MS) | [ |
| Lidocaine | 1.0 | 5.0 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| ODs | ||||
| Hexanal and heptanal (lung cancer) | 0.10–0.11 | 0.21–0.23 | SPME/GC-MS | [ |
| Breast cancer VOCs | - | - | [ | |
| Prostate cancer VOCs | 0.10 | 0.16 | [ | |
| Sarcosine and N-ethylglycine | - | 0.03–0.06 | [ | |
| Neuroendocrine tumor markers (HVA, VMA, 5-HIAA) | 0.046–24.3 | 0.063–49.6 | SPME/GC-QqQ-MS | [ |
| Unrelated cancer forms | - | - | SPME/GC-MS | [ |
| 5-HMUra and 8-oxodG (oxidatively damaged DNA) | 0.05–4.0 | 0.23–130.0 | MEPS/LC-PDA | [ |
| 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (oxidatively damaged DNA) | 2.04 nM | 7.12 nM | SPME/LC-UV | [ |
| 2.61 nM | 8.63 nM | SPME/CE-ECD | [ | |
| 17β-estradiol and 2-methoxyestradiol (potential angiogenesis modulators) | - | - | SPME/GC–MS | [ |
| Roscovitine (potential anticancer drug) | 0.5 | 1.0 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Olomoucine (potential anticancer drug) | 0.5 | 1.0 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Acrolein (lipid peroxidation by-product and metabolite of cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide (anticancer drugs)) | - | - | SPME/GC-MS | [ |
|
| ||||
| Selegiline and desmethylselegiline (PD drugs) | 0.01–0.05 | 0.05–20 | SPME/GC–MS | [ |
|
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| Serotonin, dopamine and noradrenaline | 2–20 | 5–50 | MEPS/LC-ECD | [ |
| Dopamine and serotonin | 1 | 50 | MEPS/LC-MS/MS | [ |
| Dopamine | 1.2 | 4.0 | SPME/LC-ESI-MS/MS | [ |
| Dopamine, epinephrine and norepinephrine | 4.8–7.4 (nM) | - | SPME/EC-UV | [ |
| non-polar heterocyclic amines (high carcinogenic potential) | 1.6–5.6 | 5.5–18.7 | MEPS/CLC-FLD | [ |
Abbreviations: 5-HMUra, 5-hydroxymethyluracil; 5-HIAA, 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid 8-oxodG, 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; CAR, carnitine; CEC, Capillary electrochromatography, CLC-FLD, capillary liquid chromatography - fluorometric detection; CVDs, cardiovascular diseases; GC-MS, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, GC-QqQ-MS/MS, gas chromatography-triple quadrupole-mass spectrometry; HPLC-PDA, high performance liquid chromatography with photodiode array detection; HVA, homovanillic acid; KG, ketoglutaric acid, LC-ED, high performance liquid chromatography coupled to electrochemical detection; LC-ESI/MS, liquid chromatography coupled to an electrospray ionization mass spectrometer; LC-CD, liquid chromatography with colorimetric detection; LC-FLD, liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection; LC-MS/MS, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; LC-UV, liquid chromatography coupled to an ultraviolet detector; LOD, limit of detection; LOQ, limit of quantification; METs, microextraction techniques; NDDs, neurodegenerative diseases; ODs, oncologic diseases; PD, Parkinson’s disease; SPME, solid-phase microextraction; µPESI-MS/MS, micropillar array electrospray ionization mass spectrometry; VMA, vanilmandelic acid; VOCs, volatile organic compounds.
Figure 6Flowchart for the SPME and MEPS high throughput potential applied to urinalysis for the metabolic profiling of urine and the early diagnosis of high prevalent diseases.