Quantification
of Metabolites for Assessing Human
Exposure to Soapberry Toxins Hypoglycin A and Methylenecyclopropylglycine
- Publication date
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Abstract
Ingestion
of soapberry fruit toxins hypoglycin A and methylenecyclopropylglycine
has been linked to public health challenges worldwide. In 1976, over
100 years after Jamaican vomiting sickness (JVS) was first reported,
the cause of JVS was linked to the ingestion of the toxin hypoglycin
A produced by ackee fruit. A structural analogue of hypoglycin A,
methylenecyclopropylglycine (MCPG), was implicated as the cause of
an acute encephalitis syndrome (AES). Much of the evidence linking
hypoglycin A and MCPG to these diseases has been largely circumstantial
due to the lack of an analytical method for specific metabolites.
This study presents an analytical approach to identify and quantify
specific urine metabolites for exposure to hypoglycin A and MCPG.
The metabolites are excreted in urine as glycine adducts methylenecyclopropylacetyl-glycine
(MCPA-Gly) and methylenecyclopropylformyl-glycine (MCPF-Gly). These
metabolites were processed by isotope dilution, separated by reverse-phase
liquid chromatography, and monitored by electrospray ionization tandem
mass spectrometry. The analytical response ratio was linearly proportional
to the concentration of MCPF-Gly and MCPA-Gly in urine from 0.10 to
20 μg/mL with a correlation coefficient of <i>r</i> > 0.99. The assay demonstrated accuracy ≥80% and precision
≤20% RSD across the calibration range. This method has been
applied to assess exposure to hypoglycin A and MCPG as part of a larger
public health initiative and was used to provide the first reported
identification of MCPF-Gly and MCPA-Gly in human urine