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Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36279779

ABSTRACT

Vitamin B6 and its metabolites play a crucial role in the development and interaction of brain metabolism. Following diagnostic improvements additional inherited disorders in vitamin B6 metabolism have been identified, most of them leading to a severe epileptic disorder accompanied by progressive neurological deficits including intellectual disability and microcephaly. Since early treatment can improve the outcome, fast and reliable detection of metabolic biomarkers is important. Therefore, the analysis of vitamin B6 metabolites has become increasingly important, but is, however, still challenging and limited to a few specialized laboratories. Until today, vitamin B6 metabolites are measured by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) using trichloroacetic acid for protein precipitation. In this work, we present the development and validation of a new, accurate and reliable method for analysis and quantification of the vitamin B6 vitamers pyridoxal 5́-phosphate (PLP), pyridoxal (PL), pyridoxine (PN), pyridoxamine (PM) and pyridoxic acid (PA) in human CSF samples using acetonitrile for protein precipitation. The method is based on ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry using electrospray ionization (UPLC-ESI-MS/MS). The calibration was performed in surrogate matrix Ringer solution and metabolites were quantified by their corresponding isotopically labelled internal standards. A protein precipitation by acetonitrile was applied greatly improving chromatographic separation of the metabolites in a 4.7 min chromatographic run. The method was validated following the European Medical Agency (EMA) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) guidelines for bioanalytical method validation. The metabolites were quantified from 5 to 200 nmol/L with a seven-point calibration curve and minimum coefficient of regression of 0.99. The validation was performed with quality control samples at four concentration levels with surrogate matrix ringer solution and pooled CSF material. Within- and inter-day accuracy and precision in Ringer solution were within 85.4 % (PLP) and 114.5 % (PM) and from 2.6 % (PA) to 16.5 % (PLP). Within- and inter-day accuracy and precision in pooled CSF material were within 90.5 % (PN) and 120.1 % (PL) and from 1.7 % (PA) to 19.0 % (PM). The method was tested by measuring of 158 CSF samples to determine reference ranges. The B6 vitamers PLP and PL were determined in all CSF samples above 5 nmol/L while PN, PM and PA showed concentrations below or near LOQ. Probable supplementation of PLP was detected in eight CSF samples, which revealed high concentrations of PM, PN, PL, or PA, whereas PLP was in the reference range or slightly elevated. The method is suitable for the application within a routine diagnostic laboratory.


Subject(s)
Pyridoxic Acid , Vitamin B 6 , Humans , Pyridoxic Acid/cerebrospinal fluid , Pyridoxal/cerebrospinal fluid , Pyridoxal Phosphate/cerebrospinal fluid , Pyridoxamine/cerebrospinal fluid , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Pyridoxine , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Ringer's Solution , Acetonitriles , Vitamins
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