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Defects in pyrimidine degradation identified by HPLC-electrospray tandem mass spectrometry of urine specimens or urine-soaked filter paper strips.

Authors :
van Lenthe H
van Kuilenburg AB
Ito T
Bootsma AH
van Cruchten A
Wada Y
van Gennip AH
Source :
Clinical chemistry [Clin Chem] 2000 Dec; Vol. 46 (12), pp. 1916-22.
Publication Year :
2000

Abstract

Background: Urinary concentrations of thymine, uracil, and their degradation products are useful indicators of deficiencies of enzymes of the pyrimidine degradation pathway. We describe a rapid, specific method to measure these concentrations to detect inborn errors of pyrimidine metabolism.<br />Methods: We used urine or urine-soaked filter-paper strips as samples and measured thymine, uracil, and their degradation products dihydrothymine, dihydrouracil, N:-carbamyl-ss-aminoisobutyric acid, and N:-carbamyl-ss-alanine. Reversed-phase HPLC was combined with electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry, and detection was performed by multiple-reaction monitoring. Stable-isotope-labeled reference compounds were used as internal standards.<br />Results: All pyrimidine degradation products could be measured in one analytical run of 15 min. Detection limits were 0.4-4 micromol/L. The intraassay imprecision (CV) of urine samples with added compounds was 1.3-12% for liquid urines and 1. 0-10% for filter-paper extracts of the urines. The interassay imprecision (CV) was 3-11% (100-200 micromol/L). Recoveries were 89-99% at 100-200 micromol/L and 95-106% at 1 mmol/L in liquid urines, and 93-103% at 100-200 micromol/L and 100-106% at 1 mmol/L in filter-paper samples. Correct identifications of deficiencies of the pyrimidine-degrading enzymes were readily made with urine samples from patients with known defects.<br />Conclusions: HPLC with electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry allows rapid testing for disorders of the pyrimidine degradation pathway, and filter-paper samples allow easy collection, transport, and storage of urine samples.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0009-9147
Volume :
46
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11106323