We describe a platform for the comparative profiling of urine using reversed-phase liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) and multivariate statistical data analysis. Urinary compounds were separated by gradient elution and subsequently detected by electrospray Ion-Trap MS. The lower limit of detection (5.7-21 nmol/L), within-day (2.9-19%) and between-day (4.8-19%) analytical variation of peak areas, linearity (R2: 0.918-0.999), and standard deviation for retention time (<0.52 min) of the method were assessed by means of addition of seven 3-8 amino acid peptides (0-500 nmol/L). Relating the amount of injected urine to the area under the curve (AUC) of the chromatographic trace at 214 nm better reduced the coefficient of variation (CV) of the AUC of the total ion chromatogram (CV = 10.1%) than relating it to creatinine (CV = 38.4%). LC-MS data were processed, and the common peak matrix was analyzed by principal component analysis (PCA) after supervised classification by the nearest shrunken centroid algorithm. The feasibility of the method to discriminate urine samples of differing compositions was evaluated by (i) addition of seven peptides at nanomolar concentrations to blank urine samples of different origin and (ii) a study of urine from kidney patients with and without proteinuria. (i) The added peptides were ranked as highly discriminatory peaks despite significant biological variation. (ii) Ninety-two peaks were selected best discriminating proteinuric from nonproteinuric samples, of which 6 were more intense in the majority of the proteinuric samples. Two of these 6 peaks were identified as albumin-derived peptides, which is in accordance with the early rise of albumin during glomerular proteinuria. Interestingly, other albumin-derived peptides were nondiscriminatory indicating preferential proteolysis at some cleavage sites.
Long-term cortisol levels were significantly lower in children with asthma than healthy children. Measuring long-term cortisol levels in scalp hair is an attractive, noninvasive tool that can evaluate the effect of asthma and its treatment on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.
Objective: A substantial proportion of individuals with autism have elevated levels of platelet serotonin (5-HT). We examined whether platelet hyperserotonemia is associated with increased gut 5-HT synthesis, altered 5-HT catabolism or altered melatonin production. Methods: Urinary excretion of 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) and 5-HT was compared in 10 normoserotonemic and 10 hyperserotonemic age-matched autistic individuals. The relationship of urinary 6-sulfatoxymelatonin (6-SM) excretion to platelet 5-HT, and to urinary 5-HT and 5-HIAA excretion, was also examined. Results: In the hyperserotonemic group, significant increases at trend level in urinary excretion of 5-HIAA (p = 0.061) and 5-HT (p = 0.071) and a significant decrease for 6-SM were found (p = 0.027). The urinary 5-HIAA:5-HT ratio was similar in the normo- versus the hyperserotonemic groups. Conclusions: The catabolism of 5-HT does not differ in the groups, but greater exposure of the platelet to 5-HT cannot be ruled out as a cause of the platelet hyperserotonemia of autism. Although only trend level significant, the data point to a need for larger studies to examine more thoroughly the relationships between platelet hyperserotonemia, gut 5-HT synthesis and melatonin production.
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