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A new enzymatic assay to quantify inorganic pyrophosphate in plasma.

Stefan LundkvistFatemeh NiaziorimiFlora SzeriMatthew CaffetSharon F TerryGunnar JohanssonRobert S JansenKoen van de Wetering
Published in: Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry (2022)
Inorganic pyrophosphate (PPi) is a crucial extracellular mineralization regulator. Low plasma PPi concentrations underlie the soft tissue calcification present in several rare hereditary mineralization disorders as well as in more common conditions like chronic kidney disease and diabetes. Even though deregulated plasma PPi homeostasis is known to be linked to multiple human diseases, there is currently no reliable assay for its quantification. We here describe a PPi assay that employs the enzyme ATP sulfurylase to convert PPi into ATP. Generated ATP is subsequently quantified by firefly luciferase-based bioluminescence. An internal ATP standard was used to correct for sample-specific interference by matrix compounds on firefly luciferase activity. The assay was validated and shows excellent precision (<ā€‰3.5%) and accuracy (93-106%) of PPi spiked into human plasma samples. We found that of several anticoagulants tested only EDTA effectively blocked conversion of ATP into PPi in plasma after blood collection. Moreover, filtration over a 300,000-Da molecular weight cut-off membrane reduced variability of plasma PPi and removed ATP present in a membrane-enclosed compartment, possibly platelets. Applied to plasma samples of wild-type and Abcc6 -/- rats, an animal model with established low circulating levels of PPi, the new assay showed lower variability than the assay that was previously in routine use in our laboratory. In conclusion, we here report a new and robust assay to determine PPi concentrations in plasma, which outperforms currently available assays because of its high sensitivity, precision, and accuracy.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • high throughput
  • chronic kidney disease
  • small molecule
  • cardiovascular disease
  • transcription factor
  • soft tissue
  • adipose tissue
  • nitric oxide
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • energy transfer