Molecular Speciated Isotope Dilution Mass Spectrometric Methods for Accurate,
Reproducible and Direct Quantification of Reduced, Oxidized and Total
Glutathione in Biological Samples
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Abstract
Novel
protocols were developed to accurately quantify reduced (GSH),
oxidized (GSSG) and total (tGSH) glutathione in biological samples
using molecular speciated isotope dilution mass spectrometry (SIDMS).
For GSH and GSSG measurement, the sample was spiked with isotopically
enriched analogues of the analytes (<sup>310</sup>GSH and <sup>616</sup>GSSG), along with <i>N</i>-ethylmaleimide (NEM), and treated
with acetonitrile to solubilize the endogenous analytes via protein
precipitation and equilibrate them with the spikes. The supernatant
was analyzed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS),
and the analytes were quantified with simultaneous tracking and correction
for auto-oxidation of GSH to GSSG. For tGSH assay, a <sup>310</sup>GSH-spiked sample was treated with dithiothreitol (DTT) to convert
disulfide-bonded glutathione to GSH. After removing the protein, the
supernatant was analyzed by LC-MS/MS and the analyte was quantified
by single-spiking isotope dilution mass spectrometry (IDMS). The mathematical
relationships in IDMS and SIDMS quantifications are based on isotopic
ratios and do not involve calibration curves. The protocols were validated
using spike recovery tests and by analyzing synthetic standard solutions.
Red blood cell (RBC) and saliva samples obtained from healthy subjects,
and whole blood samples collected and shipped from a remote location
were analyzed. The concentrations of tGSH in the RBC and whole blood
samples were 2 orders of magnitude higher than those found in saliva.
The fractions of GSSG were 0.2–2.2% (RBC and blood) and 15–47%
(saliva) of the free glutathione (GSH + 2xGSSG) in the corresponding
samples. Up to 3% GSH was auto-oxidized to GSSG during sample workup;
the highest oxidations (>1%) were in the saliva samples