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1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy-Based Methods for the Quantification of Proteins in Urine

Authors :
Slobodan Macura
Ivan Vuckovic
Shane A. Bobart
John C. Lieske
M. Cristine Charlesworth
Milovan Šuvakov
Fernando C. Fervenza
Aleksandar Denic
Source :
Analytical Chemistry. 93:13177-13186
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2021.

Abstract

We described several postprocessing methods to measure protein concentrations in human urine from existing 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomic spectra: (1) direct spectral integration, (2) integration of NCD spectra (NCD = 1D NOESY-CPMG), (3) integration of SMolESY-filtered 1D NOESY spectra (SMolESY = Small Molecule Enhancement SpectroscopY), (4) matching protein patterns, and (5) TSP line integral and TSP linewidth. Postprocessing consists of (a) removal of the metabolite signals (demetabolization) and (b) extraction of the protein integral from the demetabolized spectra. For demetabolization, we tested subtraction of the spin-echo 1D spectrum (CPMG) from the regular 1D spectrum and low-pass filtering of 1D NOESY by its derivatives (c-SMolESY). Because of imperfections in the demetabolization, in addition to direct integration, we extracted protein integrals by the piecewise comparison of demetabolized spectra with the reference spectrum of albumin. We analyzed 42 urine samples with protein content known from the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) assay. We found excellent correlation between the BCA assay and the demetabolized NMR integrals. We have provided conversion factors for calculating protein concentrations in mg/mL from spectral integrals in mM. Additionally, we found the trimethylsilyl propionate (TSP, NMR standard) spectral linewidth and the TSP integral to be good indicators of protein concentration. The described methods increase the information content of urine NMR metabolomics spectra by informing clinical studies of protein concentration.

Details

ISSN :
15206882 and 00032700
Volume :
93
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Analytical Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........05f380c8691517fda4de8ad71c09bb49