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A Validated Method for the Quantification of Amino Acids in Mammalian Urine

Applications | 2016 | WatersInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
Waters

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Amino acids serve as fundamental building blocks of proteins, act as neurotransmitters, and participate in key metabolic pathways in mammalian physiology. Accurate measurement of amino acid levels in biological fluids like urine is essential for biochemical research, toxicology studies, and clinical investigations into metabolic disorders. High-throughput, sensitive, and reproducible analytical methods enable deeper understanding of disease mechanisms and biomarker discovery.

Objectives and Study Overview


This work describes the development and one-day validation of a UPLC-MS/MS method for the absolute quantification of 20 proteinogenic amino acids and relative quantification of 18 additional amino acids in rat urine. The target concentration range was 0.2–200.0 µM, covering physiologically relevant levels. The workflow aimed to combine rapid sample throughput with robust chromatographic separation and mass spectrometric detection.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Sample Preparation:
  • 50 µL urine spiked with labeled internal standards.
  • Protein precipitation with 150 µL methanol containing 0.1% formic acid.
  • Derivatization with AccQ·Tag Ultra reagent in borate buffer at pH 8.6, 55 °C for 10 minutes.

Chromatography and Detection:
  • Column: ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 (1.8 µm, 150 × 2.1 mm) at 45 °C.
  • Mobile phases: water + 0.1% formic acid (A) and acetonitrile + 0.1% formic acid (B).
  • Gradient: 4% B for 0.5 min, ramp to 10% at 2.5 min, to 28% at 5 min, to 95% at 5.1 min, hold to 6.1 min, return to 4% by 6.2 min, total run 7.5 min.
  • Mass spectrometer: Xevo TQ-S micro with electrospray ionization (positive mode), using MRM transitions and compound-specific cone voltages and collision energies.

Main Results and Discussion


The method achieved baseline separation of amino acids with peak widths ~3 seconds and retention time stability across runs. Calibration curves were linear (r² > 0.999) over three orders of magnitude. Lower limits of quantification (0.2 µM) exhibited acceptable signal-to-noise ratios and CV values typically below 10%. Intra-day accuracy and precision for quality control samples at five concentration levels met FDA bioanalytical validation criteria. Analysis throughput reached two 96-well plates (192 samples) per 24 hours.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • High sensitivity and selectivity without extensive chromatographic resolution of isobaric interferences.
  • Fast turnaround supports large-scale studies in metabolomics and toxicology.
  • Minimal sample volume and streamlined derivatization reduce manual handling.
  • Use of stable isotope internal standards improves quantification accuracy.

Future Trends and Potential Uses


Integration of automated sample preparation and direct coupling to high-throughput UPLC-MS/MS platforms will further enhance efficiency. Expanding isotope-labeled libraries and combining amino acid profiling with broader metabolite panels will support comprehensive phenotyping in precision medicine. Miniaturized and portable MS systems may enable point-of-care metabolic monitoring.

Conclusion


A validated UPLC-MS/MS method provides rapid, precise, and robust quantification of a broad panel of amino acids in mammalian urine. The approach offers a practical alternative to traditional ion exchange or fluorescence-based assays, delivering high throughput and reliable data for research applications.

Used Instrumentation


  • ACQUITY UPLC I-Class System
  • ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 Column
  • Xevo TQ-S micro Mass Spectrometer with StepWave ion guide
  • AccQ·Tag Ultra Reagent
  • Waters MassLynx and TargetLynx Software

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