2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2008.08.075
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Development and validation of a fast quantitative method for plasma dimethylarginines analysis using liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry

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Cited by 35 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…The method employs a small sample volume (25 µl), use of a stable isotope-labeled L-arginine internal standard, a simple sample preparation method with isopropanol (17), and a chromatographic run time of 9 min without the need for derivatization. Our technique complements existing published methods that use HILIC chromatography and LC-MS/MS (13, 18, 19), and builds upon them by: 1) multiplexing the analysis with six analytes and 2) extending our findings to a human population stratified by hsCRP and a mouse model of inflammation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The method employs a small sample volume (25 µl), use of a stable isotope-labeled L-arginine internal standard, a simple sample preparation method with isopropanol (17), and a chromatographic run time of 9 min without the need for derivatization. Our technique complements existing published methods that use HILIC chromatography and LC-MS/MS (13, 18, 19), and builds upon them by: 1) multiplexing the analysis with six analytes and 2) extending our findings to a human population stratified by hsCRP and a mouse model of inflammation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The buffering of the samples prior to protein precipitation led to slightly higher and more stable peak intensities in the resulting chromatograms, compared to our previous method without buffering [14]. Other protein precipitation agents, such as methanol with 1% ammonium acetate [12] or methanol:acetonitrile (25:75) [15], were described in the literature. However, the results were comparable with those of our current method in terms of peak shape and absence of interfering peaks.…”
Section: Sample Preparationmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…An added value with HILIC in the light that biomarkers can be chemically unstable is that a simple protein precipitation procedure followed by direction injection is feasible for sample preparation. There have been many reports in the literature using this approach for quantitation of biomarkers such as dimethylarginine 100–102, ornithione 103, GABA (γ‐aminobutyric acid) 104, acetylcholine 105, methylalonic acid 89, and so on. Orthogonal sample preparation and chromatographic separation such as RP‐SPE‐HILIC and mixed‐mode SPE‐HILIC have also been employed to achieve extensive sample cleanup in quantitation of melamine 106, nucleosides 107, S ‐adenosylmethionine 58, glutathione 108, etc .…”
Section: Novel Application Of Hilic In Quantitative Bioanalysismentioning
confidence: 99%