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Quantification of Gut Microbiota Dysbiosis-Related Organic Acids in Human Urine Using LC-MS/MS.

Yu-Tsung LeeSui-Qing HuangChing-Hao LinLi-Heng PaoHsin-Yuan Chen
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Urine organic acid contains water-soluble metabolites and/or metabolites-derived from sugars, amino acids, lipids, vitamins, and drugs-which can reveal a human's physiological condition. These urine organic acids-hippuric acid, benzoic acid, phenylacetic acid, phenylpropionic acid, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, 4-hydroxyphenyl acetic acid, 3-hydroxyphenylpropionic acid, 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl propionic acid, and 3-indoleacetic acid-were the eligible candidates for the dysbiosis of gut microbiota. The aim of this proposal was to develop and to validate a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) bioanalysis method for the nine organic acids in human urine. Stable-labeled isotope standard (creatinine-d 3 ) and acetonitrile were added to the urine sample. The supernatant was diluted with deionized water and injected into LC-MS/MS. This method was validated with high selectivity for the urine sample, a low limit of quantification (10-40 ng/mL), good linearity ( r > 0.995), high accuracy (85.8-109.7%), and high precision (1.4-13.3%). This method simultaneously analyzed creatinine in urine, which calibrates metabolic rate between different individuals. Validation has been completed for this method; as such, it could possibly be applied to the study of gut microbiota clinically.
Keyphrases
  • water soluble
  • liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
  • ms ms
  • computed tomography
  • gene expression
  • metabolic syndrome
  • mass spectrometry
  • high resolution
  • pet ct
  • pluripotent stem cells