1 research outputs found
Localization and Quantification of Drugs in Animal Tissues by Use of Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry Imaging
Mass spectrometric imaging (MSI) has emerged as a powerful
technique
to obtain spatial arrangement of individual molecular ions in animal
tissues. Ambient desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) technique
is uniquely suited for such imaging experiments, as it can be performed
on animal tissues in their native environment without prior treatments.
Although MSI has become a rapid growing technique for localization
of proteins, lipids, drugs, and endogenous compounds in different
tissues, quantification of imaged targets has not been explored extensively.
Here we present a novel MSI approach for localization and quantification
of drugs in animal thin tissue sections. DESI-MSI using an Orbitrap
mass analyzer in full scan mode was performed on 6 μm coronal
brain sections from rats that were administered 2.5 mg/kg clozapine.
Clozapine was localized and quantified in individual brain sections
45 min postdose. External calibration curves were prepared by micropipetting
standards with internal standard (IS) on top of the tissues, and average
response factors were calculated for the scans in which both clozapine
and IS were detected. All response factors were normalized to area
units. Quantifications from DESI-MSI revealed 0.2–1.2 ng of
clozapine in individual brain sections, results that were further
confirmed by extraction and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry
(LC/MS/MS) analysis