| Literature DB >> 32399306 |
Abstract
Isoflavones and isoflavandiols have shown many health benefits, such as reducing cardiovascular disease, cancer, age-related disease, and osteoporosis. However, to investigate the relationships between consumption of isoflavones and their health benefits, it is important to be able to accurately quantify exposure in the large numbers of samples typically produced in association studies (i.e., several thousands). Current methods rely on solid-phase extraction protocols for sample cleanup, resulting in protracted extraction and analysis times. Here, we describe a fast and easy sample preparation method of human urine samples for subsequent quantification of daidzein, genistein (isoflavones), and equol (isoflavandiol) using LC-MS/MS. Sample preparation involves only the addition of dimethylformamide (DMF) and formic acid (FA) after enzymatic hydrolysis of their metabolites by a β-glucuronidase and sulfatase mixture. The method was validated by precision, linearity, accuracy, recoveries, limit of detection (LOD), and limit of quantification (LOQ). Linear calibration curves have been shown by daidzein, genistein, and equol. The correlation coefficients values are r 2 > 0.99 for daidzein, genistein, and equol. LOD for daidzein and genistein was 1 ng/ml and equol was 2 ng/ml. Recoveries were >90%, and the relative standard deviation for intraday (<10%) and interday (≤20% over 10 days) was good. This method is suitable for quantification of isoflavones and the microbial metabolite equol in human urine and is particularly useful where large numbers of samples require analysis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32399306 PMCID: PMC7201686 DOI: 10.1155/2020/2359397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Methods Chem ISSN: 2090-8873 Impact factor: 2.193
Summary of the monitored protonated ions and the optimised MS operating parameters of the analytes.
| Analytes | (M-H)− ( | Precursor ion ( | Product ion ( | DP (volts) | CE (volts) | CXP (volts) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taxifolin (IS) | 303 | 303 | 125 | −80 | −30 | −9 |
| Equol | 241 | 241 | 121 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
| Genistein | 269 | 269 | 133 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Daidzein | 253 | 253 | 91 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Equol-glucuronide | 417 | 417 | 241 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
| Equol-diglucuronide | 593 | 593 | 241 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
| Equol-sulfate | 321 | 321 | 241 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
| Equol-disulfate | 401 | 401 | 241 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
| Genistein-glucuronide | 445 | 445 | 269 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Genistein-diglucuronide | 621 | 621 | 269 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Genistein-sulfate | 349 | 349 | 269 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Genistein-disulfate | 429 | 429 | 269 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Daidzein-glucuronide | 429 | 429 | 253 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Daidzein-diglucuronide | 605 | 605 | 253 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Daidzein-sulfate | 333 | 333 | 253 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Daidzein-disulfate | 413 | 413 | 253 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Daidzein-sulfoglucuronide | 509 | 509 | 253 | −95 | −50 | −13 |
| Genistein-sulfoglucuronide | 525 | 525 | 269 | −90 | −42 | −9 |
| Equol-sulfoglucuronide | 497 | 497 | 241 | −75 | −20 | −7 |
Figure 1Daidzein, genistein, and equol sulfate metabolites after hydrolysis using a glucuronidase/sulfatase mixture (200/20 U) for 2 h at pH 5 and 37°C. LC-MS/MS extracted ion chromatograms of (a) 333/253 (daidzein sulfate), (b) 349/269 (genistein sulfate), and (c) 321/241 (equol sulfate).
Figure 2Total daidzein, genistein, and equol amount (mg) plotted against a range of total enzyme units between 220 and 4400. (a) Data 1, daidzein; (b) data 2, genistein; (c) data 3, equol. Note: incubations were carried out over 30, 60, and 120 min at pH 5 and 37°C.
Comparison of the efficiency of conjugate hydrolysis between method 1 and method 2.
| Method name | Daidzein glucuronide ( | Genistein glucuronide ( | Equol glucuronide ( | Daidzein monosulfate ( | Genistein monosulfate ( | Equol monosulfate ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Method 1 | − | − | − | + | + | + |
| Method 2 | − | − | − | − | − | − |
Method 1 is the original method and does not result in complete hydrolysis of isoflavone and equol sulfates. Method 2 is the new method reported here which efficiently hydrolyses all the isoflavone and equol phase-2 conjugates including the sulfates. + denotes presence of compound after hydrolysis (i.e., not fully hydrolysed) and − denotes fully hydrolysed (i.e., no detectable conjugates observed after hydrolysis).
Validation data for each analyte in human urine.
| Compound |
| Slope(b) ( | Precision, intraday (%)(c) | Precision, interday (%)(d) | Precision in spiked sample ( | Precision in spiked sample ( | Accuracy (%) | LOD (ng/ml) | LOQ (ng/ml) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||||||
| Daidzein | 0.995 | 2.763 | 5.9 | 8.15 | 9.0 | 6.37 | 5.7 | 19 | 14.8 | 11 | >100 | >90 | >90 | 1 | 3 |
| Genistein | 0.996 | 0.009 | 7.2 | 7.3 | 4.73 | 4.1 | 2.80 | 17.8 | 14.1 | 8.9 | >100 | >90 | >90 | 1 | 3 |
| Equol | 0.997 | 3.189 | 9.24 | 5.33 | 3.33 | 19.1 | 14.8 | 8.5 | >100 | >90 | >90 | 2 | 6 | ||
(a) R 2 for calibration curve (a measure of goodness of fit of the least squares linear regression); values are mean of 10 calibration curves. (b)Values are mean of 10 calibration curves; units are peak area ratio (μg/ml)−1. (c)Precision (determined in an authentic volunteer sample, n = 6 replicate analyses); value is relative standard deviation (RSD). (d)Precision (determined in an authentic volunteer sample, n = 10 analyses on different days); value is RSD. L: low-concentration quality control sample; M: medium-concentration quality control sample; H: high-concentration quality control sample; LOD: limit of detection; LOQ: limit of quantification.
Comparison of the quantification of daidzein and genistein using the standard addition and matrix matched calibration curve method.
| Compound name | Standard addition method ( | Matrix matched calibration curve ( |
|---|---|---|
| Daidzein | 10.5 | 9.3 |
| Genistein | 0.756 | 0.707 |