An optimized buffer system for NMR-based urinary metabonomics with effective pH control, chemical shift consistency and dilution minimization

Literature Information

Publication Date 2009-02-23
DOI 10.1039/B818802E
Impact Factor 4.616
Authors

Fuhua Hao, Xiaorong Qin, Yulan Wang, Huiru Tang



Abstract

NMR-based metabonomics has been widely employed to understand the stressor-induced perturbations to mammalian metabolism. However, inter-sample chemical shift variations for metabolites remain an outstanding problem for effective data mining. In this work, we systematically investigated the effects of pH and ionic strength on the chemical shifts for a mixture of 9 urinary metabolites. We found that the chemical shifts were decreased with the rise of pH but increased with the increase of ionic strength, which probably resulted from the pH- and ionic strength-induced alteration to the ionization equilibrium for the function groups. We also found that the chemical shift variations for most metabolites were reduced to less than 0.004 ppm when the pH was 7.1–7.7 and the salt concentration was less than 0.15 M. Based on subsequent optimization to minimize chemical shift variation, sample dilution and maximize the signal-to-noise ratio, we proposed a new buffer system consisting of K2HPO4 and NaH2PO4 (pH 7.4, 1.5 M) with buffer–urine volume ratio of 1 : 10 for human urinary metabonomic studies; we suggest that the chemical shifts for the proton signals of citrate and aromatic signals of histidine be corrected prior to multivariate data analysis especially when high resolution data were employed. Based on these, an optimized sample preparation method has been developed for NMR-based urinary metabonomic studies.

Source Journal

Analyst

Analyst
CiteScore: 7.8
Self-citation Rate: 5.6%
Articles per Year: 653

Analyst publishes analytical and bioanalytical research that reports premier fundamental discoveries and inventions, and the applications of those discoveries, unconfined by traditional discipline barriers.

Recommended Suppliers

United KingdomHosokawa Micron Ltd.
ChinaChongqing Chencheng Medicine Company Limited
ChinaHunan Fengen New Materials Technology Co., Ltd.
GermanyMCI - Miritz Citrus Ingredients GmbH
ChinaBeijing Vosisen Technology Co., Ltd
ChinaShijiazhuang Ultrafine New Materials Technology Co., Ltd.
ChinaTaihuang Lanfeng Chemical Co., Ltd.
SwitzerlandDr.Marino Müller AG
United KingdomBaerlocher UK
ItalyBrembana Costruzioni Industriali s.r.l.
Disclaimer
This page provides academic journal information for reference and research purposes only. We are not affiliated with any journal publishers and do not handle publication submissions. For publication-related inquiries, please contact the respective journal publishers directly.
If you notice any inaccuracies in the information displayed, please contact us at [email protected]. We will promptly review and address your concerns.