TY - JOUR
T1 - Development and validation of an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography/triple quadrupole mass spectrometry method for analyzing microbial-derived grape polyphenol metabolites
AU - Zhao, Danyue
AU - Yuan, Bo
AU - Carry, Eileen
AU - Pasinetti, Giulio M.
AU - Ho, Lap
AU - Faith, Jeremiah
AU - Mogno, Ilaria
AU - Simon, Jim
AU - Wu, Qingli
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was done as part of the Core B research program in NIH Botanical Center with funds provided by NIH ODS and NCCAM IP50AT008661-01 to Mt. Sinai and with Supplemental Funding by the NIH to Mt. Sinai (Grant number 0254-3831-4609). We thank Agilent Instruments for providing the state-of-art analytical instrumentation as part of a scientific collaborative agreement to Rutgers that was used to conduct this study. Funds were also provided by the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Hatch Project Number NJ12158. The authors are very thankful to Dr. Mario Ferruzzi in North Carolina State University for his constructive suggestions. We thank Daniel Giurleo for preparing phenolic extracts from the biological samples.
Funding Information:
This work was done as part of the Core B research program in NIH Botanical Center with funds provided by NIH ODS and NCCAM IP50AT008661-01 to Mt. Sinai and with Supplemental Funding by the NIH to Mt. Sinai (Grant number 0254-3831-4609 ). We thank Agilent Instruments for providing the state-of-art analytical instrumentation as part of a scientific collaborative agreement to Rutgers that was used to conduct this study. Funds were also provided by the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station Hatch Project Number NJ12158 . The authors are very thankful to Dr. Mario Ferruzzi in North Carolina State University for his constructive suggestions. We thank Daniel Giurleo for preparing phenolic extracts from the biological samples.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2018/11/1
Y1 - 2018/11/1
N2 - Accumulating evidence indicates that the health impact of dietary phenolic compounds, including the principal grape-derived polyphenols, (+)‑catechin and (−)‑epicatechin, is exerted by not only the parent compounds but also their phenolic metabolites generated by the gut microbiota. In this work, a new high-throughput, sensitive and reproducible analytical method was developed employing ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled with triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QqQ-MS/MS) for the simultaneous analysis of 16 microbial-generated phenolic acid metabolites (PAMs) along with their precursors, catechin and epicatechin. Following optimizing the solvent system, LC conditions and MS parameters, method validation was carried out to evaluate the sensitivity, selectivity, accuracy and precision of the proposed method, and to ensure promising recovery of all analytes extracted from the matrix prior to bioanalysis. Results showed that the optimized analytical method allowed successful confirmation and quantitation of all analytes under dynamic multiple reaction monitoring mode using trans‑cinnamic acid‑d7 as an internal standard (I.S.). Excellent sensitivity and linearity were obtained for all analytes, with lower limits of detection (LLODs) and lower limits of quantification (LLOQs) in the ranges of 0.225–2.053 ng/mL and 0.698–8.116 ng/mL, respectively. By examining blank matrix spiked with standard mixture at different concentration levels, promising recoveries at two spiking levels (low level, 91.2–115%; high level 90.2–121%), and excellent precision (RSD < 10%) were obtained. This method was then successfully applied to an in vitro study where catechin/epicatechin-enriched broth samples were anaerobically fermented with gut microbes procured from healthy human donors. All sources of bacteria employed showed remarkable activity in metabolizing grape polyphenols and distinct variations in the production of PAMs. The successful application of this method in the in vitro fermentation assays demonstrates its suitability for high-throughput analysis of polyphenol metabolites, particularly catechin/epicatechin-derived PAMs, in biological studies.
AB - Accumulating evidence indicates that the health impact of dietary phenolic compounds, including the principal grape-derived polyphenols, (+)‑catechin and (−)‑epicatechin, is exerted by not only the parent compounds but also their phenolic metabolites generated by the gut microbiota. In this work, a new high-throughput, sensitive and reproducible analytical method was developed employing ultra-high performance liquid chromatography coupled with triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QqQ-MS/MS) for the simultaneous analysis of 16 microbial-generated phenolic acid metabolites (PAMs) along with their precursors, catechin and epicatechin. Following optimizing the solvent system, LC conditions and MS parameters, method validation was carried out to evaluate the sensitivity, selectivity, accuracy and precision of the proposed method, and to ensure promising recovery of all analytes extracted from the matrix prior to bioanalysis. Results showed that the optimized analytical method allowed successful confirmation and quantitation of all analytes under dynamic multiple reaction monitoring mode using trans‑cinnamic acid‑d7 as an internal standard (I.S.). Excellent sensitivity and linearity were obtained for all analytes, with lower limits of detection (LLODs) and lower limits of quantification (LLOQs) in the ranges of 0.225–2.053 ng/mL and 0.698–8.116 ng/mL, respectively. By examining blank matrix spiked with standard mixture at different concentration levels, promising recoveries at two spiking levels (low level, 91.2–115%; high level 90.2–121%), and excellent precision (RSD < 10%) were obtained. This method was then successfully applied to an in vitro study where catechin/epicatechin-enriched broth samples were anaerobically fermented with gut microbes procured from healthy human donors. All sources of bacteria employed showed remarkable activity in metabolizing grape polyphenols and distinct variations in the production of PAMs. The successful application of this method in the in vitro fermentation assays demonstrates its suitability for high-throughput analysis of polyphenol metabolites, particularly catechin/epicatechin-derived PAMs, in biological studies.
KW - Grape polyphenols
KW - Gut microbiota
KW - In vitro fermentation
KW - Method validation
KW - Phenolic acid metabolites
KW - UHPLC-QqQ-MS/MS
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85051978030&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jchromb.2018.09.014
DO - 10.1016/j.jchromb.2018.09.014
M3 - Article
C2 - 30241072
AN - SCOPUS:85051978030
SN - 1570-0232
VL - 1099
SP - 34
EP - 45
JO - Journal of Chromatography B: Analytical Technologies in the Biomedical and Life Sciences
JF - Journal of Chromatography B: Analytical Technologies in the Biomedical and Life Sciences
ER -