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Magnetic susceptibility to measure total protein concentration from NMR metabolite spectra: Demonstration on blood plasma
Author(s) -
Jupin Marc,
Michiels Paul J.,
Girard Frederic C.,
Wijmenga Sybren S.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
magnetic resonance in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.696
H-Index - 225
eISSN - 1522-2594
pISSN - 0740-3194
DOI - 10.1002/mrm.25178
Subject(s) - metabolite , chemistry , biuret test , valine , alanine , blood proteins , albumin , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , blood plasma , leucine , whole blood , metabolome , chromatography , nuclear magnetic resonance , amino acid , biochemistry , urea , stereochemistry , physics , immunology , biology
Purpose Accurate metabolite and protein quantification in blood plasma and other body fluids from one single NMR measurement, allowing for improved quantitative metabolic profiling and better assessment of metabolite‐protein interactions. Theory and Methods The total protein concentration is derived from the common chemical‐shift changes—caused by protein‐induced bulk magnetic susceptibility (BMS)—measured on well‐accessible and exchange‐free metabolite resonances. These BMS shifts are simply obtained by external referencing with respect to 3‐(trimethylsilyl)propionic‐ 2,2,3,3‐d 4 acid, sodium salt in a coaxial insert. Results Based on blood‐plasma data from five volunteers, the estimated accuracy of the BMS method is ≤ 5% with respect and comparable to the 3.8% error of the standard colorimetric, Biuret, method. Valine, alanine, glucose, leucine, and lactate display no exchange‐induced shift changes. Their well‐accessible signals act as reliable probes for pure protein‐induced BMS. The slopes and intercepts of their chemical‐shift change versus protein concentration were derived from metabolite mixtures with (fatted) human and bovine albumin acting as blood‐plasma mimics. Conclusion The BMS method, demonstrated on blood plasma, can also be used on other samples containing sufficient protein (> 10 g/L). Also, it allows measurement of the presence and sign of exchange‐induced chemical‐shift changes. Magn Reson Med 73:459–468, 2015. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.