| Literature DB >> 33171777 |
Alexander Weitzel1, Claudia Samol1, Peter J Oefner1, Wolfram Gronwald1.
Abstract
The spectral resolution of 2D 1H-13C heteronuclear single quantum coherence (1H-13C-HSQC) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra facilitates both metabolite identification and quantification in nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabolomics. However, quantification is complicated by variations in magnetization transfer, which among others originate mainly from scalar coupling differences. Methods that compensate for variation in scalar coupling include the generation of calibration factors for individual signals or the use of additional pulse sequence schemes such as quantitative HSQC (Q-HSQC) that suppress the JCH-dependence by modulating the polarization transfer delays of HSQC or, additionally, employ a pure-shift homodecoupling approach in the 1H dimension, such as Quantitative, Perfected and Pure Shifted HSQC (QUIPU-HSQC). To test the quantitative accuracy of these three methods, employing a 600 MHz NMR spectrometer equipped with a helium cooled cryoprobe, a Latin-square design that covered the physiological concentration ranges of 10 metabolites was used. The results show the suitability of all three methods for the quantification of highly abundant metabolites. However, the substantially increased residual water signal observed in QUIPU-HSQC spectra impeded the quantification of low abundant metabolites located near the residual water signal, thus limiting its utility in high-throughput metabolite fingerprinting studies.Entities:
Keywords: HSQC; NMR; Q-HSQC; QUIPU-HSQC; cryoprobe; metabolomics; quantification; water suppression
Year: 2020 PMID: 33171777 PMCID: PMC7695005 DOI: 10.3390/metabo10110449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1Dependency of H-C-HSQC cross-peak signal volumes on the scalar coupling constant JCH for a standard HSQC experiment with an INEPT delay ms in blue and a Q-HSQC experiment with INEPT delays of and ms, respectively, at a ratio of 3:1 in orange. The crosses indicate the JCH-coupling values of 20 signals of the metabolites in the used model mixture (see Materials and Methods section for details).
Integral volumes of the four histidine signals normalized to C2H2. The third column shows the predicted ratios modulated by non-uniform magnetization transfer due to different JCH values. The predicted ratios were calculated on the basis of in-house measured JCH values. The fourth column presents the measured ratios for the highest histidine concentration measured by standard HSQC without correction by calibration factors. The penultimate and ultimate columns show the observed ratios for the highest histidine concentration observed by Q-HSQC and QUIPU-HSQC, respectively.
| Coupling | Predicted | Without | Q-HSQC | QUIPU-HSQC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C2 H2 | 140.8 | 1 | 1.00 ± 0.4% | 1.00 ± 1% | 1.00 ± 4% |
| C3 H3A/B | 128.3/117.4 | 0.94 | 0.97 ± 2% | 0.87 ± 2% | 0.83 ± 2% |
| C5 H5 | 193.4 | 0.75 | 0.82 ± 2% | 1.01 ± 0.8% | 0.54 ± 19% |
| C7 H7 | 211.4 | 0.57 | 0.61 ± 5% | 0.93 ± 3.6% | 0.48 ± 6% |
Figure 2Comparison of concentration estimates for acetic acid (a), alanine (b), betaine (c), citric acid (d), creatinine (e), ethanolamine (f), glycine (g), histidine (h), taurine (i), and trimethylamine-N-oxide (j). The x-axis shows the ten concentration levels and the y-axis the observed concentrations with 1D H NMR in blue, standard HSQC in red, Q-HSQC in orange and QUIPU-HSQC in purple. The lower five concentration levels are added as inserts. The concentration values are means over technical triplicates. In the case that the compound was detected in all three replicates, the corresponding standard deviation is included as a measure of error.
Figure 3Exemplary 2D H-C-HSQC spectra obtained by means of: standard HSQC (a); Q-HSQC (b); and QUIPU-HSQC (c). Inserts depict the spectral regions of 70.0–35.0 and 5.5–2.0 ppm. A considerable number of signals stemming from aliphatic protons of the investigated metabolites is located in this region. Furthermore, the residual water signal at 4.78 ppm is located in this region, thus frequent overlap is present.
Summary of the properties of Standard HSQC, Q-HSQC and QUIPU-HSQC. LODs and LLOQs were calculated from the results in Tables S3–S5. The LOD is defined as the minimum concentration above which a compound is always detected. The LLOQ is defined according to FDA guideline as the minimum concentration for which the RSD is <20%.
| Standard HSQC | Q-HSQC | QUIPU-HSQC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| mean LOD [ | 78 | 80 | 71 |
| mean LLOQ [ | 187 | 148 | 640 |
| Requirement of calibration values | Yes | No | No |
| Sensitivity towards | Yes | No | No |
| Suppression of | No | No | Yes |
| Sensitivity towards residual water signal | Normal | Normal | Increased |
| Measurement time [min] | 55 | 108 | 110 |