NMR Method for Measuring Carbon-13 Isotopic Enrichment of Metabolites in Complex Solutions
Author(s) -
Ian A. Lewis,
Ryan H. Karsten,
Mark E. Norton,
Marco Tonelli,
William M. Westler,
John L. Markley
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
analytical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.117
H-Index - 332
eISSN - 1520-6882
pISSN - 0003-2700
DOI - 10.1021/ac100565b
Subject(s) - chemistry , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , isotope , isotope dilution , metabolite , metabolic flux analysis , analytical chemistry (journal) , metabolomics , nmr spectra database , molecule , spectroscopy , pulse sequence , spectral line , two dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , isotopes of carbon , nuclear magnetic resonance , mass spectrometry , chromatography , stereochemistry , metabolism , environmental chemistry , organic chemistry , biochemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , astronomy , total organic carbon
Isotope-based methods are commonly used for metabolic flux analysis and metabolite quantification in biological extracts. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is a powerful analytical tool for these studies because NMR can unambiguously identify compounds and accurately measure (13)C enrichment. We have developed a new pulse sequence, isotope-edited total correlation spectroscopy (ITOCSY), that filters two-dimensional (1)H-(1)H NMR spectra from (12)C- and (13)C-containing molecules into separate, quantitatively equivalent spectra. The ITOCSY spectra of labeled and unlabeled molecules are directly comparable and can be assigned using existing bioinformatics tools. In this study, we evaluate ITOCSY using synthetic mixtures of standards and extracts from Escherichia coli . We show that ITOCSY has low technical error (6.6% for metabolites ranging from 0.34 to 6.2 mM) and can detect molecules at concentrations less than 10 muM. We propose ITOCSY as a practical NMR strategy for metabolic flux analysis, isotope dilution experiments, and other methods that rely on carbon-13 labeling.
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