Effects on Endogenous Metabolites Following the Administration of Methapyrilene: A Data-Dependent Acquisition Workflow Using the Xevo™ MRT Mass Spectrometer
Applications | 2025 | WatersInstrumentation
Pharmacometabodynamics investigates reversible, time-dependent changes in endogenous metabolites induced by drug administration, offering critical insights into drug action and toxicity mechanisms. Methapyrilene, an H1-receptor antagonist linked to drug-induced liver injury, serves as a model to explore how dosing regimens affect metabolic phenotypes.
This study aimed to characterize urinary metabolomic alterations in rats over six days following oral administration of methapyrilene at varying doses, demonstrating a data-dependent acquisition (DDA) workflow on the Xevo MRT mass spectrometer to achieve high-confidence metabolite identification.
Wistar rats (n=18) received daily oral doses of methapyrilene (0, 10, or 150 mg/kg) for five days. Urine was collected at defined intervals, protein-precipitated with acetonitrile/methanol, centrifuged, and diluted before analysis.
Reversed-phase UPLC employed a 5.0 min gradient (50–99% acetonitrile) at 0.6 mL/min. Mass spectrometric data were acquired in DDA mode (20 Hz MS; 50 Hz MS/MS) with dynamic exclusion. Instrumentation included:
Data conversion to mzML and processing in MS-DIAL encompassed peak picking, alignment, normalization, principal component analysis (PCA), analysis of variance (ANOVA), hierarchical clustering, and compound identification against a spectral library of authentic standards.
The workflow detected 18 653 features. PCA revealed clear time-dependent metabolic shifts and cage effects; drug-related signals were excluded to focus on endogenous changes. The top 25 discriminatory features included amino acids, organic acids, and nucleosides. Cholic acid identification demonstrated high MS/MS coverage and sub-ppm mass accuracy. Tightening mass tolerances from 5 ppm/2 ppm to 1 ppm/1 ppm reduced database hits from 8 869 to 4 693 candidates. A dipeptide feature (m/z 245.1859) was narrowed from 48 to 4 possible structures and confidently assigned as isoleucyl-isoleucine based on a diagnostic fragment ion at m/z 130.0505.
Advancements in mass spectrometry speed and resolution will further enhance detection of low-abundance metabolites. Combining pharmacometabodynamic profiling with multi-omics and machine learning holds promise for personalized drug safety assessments and mechanistic toxicology studies.
The optimized DDA workflow on the Xevo MRT mass spectrometer, coupled with fast UPLC and robust data processing, delivers high-confidence metabolite identifications. This approach enables in-depth characterization of drug-induced metabolic dynamics and supports improved toxicological evaluation.
1. Molloy et al. The Pharmacometabodynamics of Gefitinib after Intravenous Administration to Mice: A Preliminary UPLC-IM-MS Study. Metabolites. 2021;11(6):379.
2. Graichen et al. Effects of methapyrilene on rat hepatic xenobiotic enzymes and liver morphology. Fundam Appl Toxicol. 1985;5:165–174.
3. Tsugawa et al. MS-DIAL: data-independent MS/MS deconvolution for comprehensive metabolome analysis. Nat Methods. 2015;12:523–526.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/TOF, LC/HRMS
IndustriesMetabolomics, Pharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Pharmacometabodynamics investigates reversible, time-dependent changes in endogenous metabolites induced by drug administration, offering critical insights into drug action and toxicity mechanisms. Methapyrilene, an H1-receptor antagonist linked to drug-induced liver injury, serves as a model to explore how dosing regimens affect metabolic phenotypes.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study aimed to characterize urinary metabolomic alterations in rats over six days following oral administration of methapyrilene at varying doses, demonstrating a data-dependent acquisition (DDA) workflow on the Xevo MRT mass spectrometer to achieve high-confidence metabolite identification.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Wistar rats (n=18) received daily oral doses of methapyrilene (0, 10, or 150 mg/kg) for five days. Urine was collected at defined intervals, protein-precipitated with acetonitrile/methanol, centrifuged, and diluted before analysis.
Reversed-phase UPLC employed a 5.0 min gradient (50–99% acetonitrile) at 0.6 mL/min. Mass spectrometric data were acquired in DDA mode (20 Hz MS; 50 Hz MS/MS) with dynamic exclusion. Instrumentation included:
- ACQUITY Premier UPLC System
- Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer
Data conversion to mzML and processing in MS-DIAL encompassed peak picking, alignment, normalization, principal component analysis (PCA), analysis of variance (ANOVA), hierarchical clustering, and compound identification against a spectral library of authentic standards.
Key Results and Discussion
The workflow detected 18 653 features. PCA revealed clear time-dependent metabolic shifts and cage effects; drug-related signals were excluded to focus on endogenous changes. The top 25 discriminatory features included amino acids, organic acids, and nucleosides. Cholic acid identification demonstrated high MS/MS coverage and sub-ppm mass accuracy. Tightening mass tolerances from 5 ppm/2 ppm to 1 ppm/1 ppm reduced database hits from 8 869 to 4 693 candidates. A dipeptide feature (m/z 245.1859) was narrowed from 48 to 4 possible structures and confidently assigned as isoleucyl-isoleucine based on a diagnostic fragment ion at m/z 130.0505.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Rapid DDA acquisition yields rich fragmentation data for structural elucidation.
- High mass resolution and accuracy minimize false positives in database searches.
- Integration with MS-DIAL ensures a streamlined, reproducible workflow for large-scale metabolomic studies.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advancements in mass spectrometry speed and resolution will further enhance detection of low-abundance metabolites. Combining pharmacometabodynamic profiling with multi-omics and machine learning holds promise for personalized drug safety assessments and mechanistic toxicology studies.
Conclusion
The optimized DDA workflow on the Xevo MRT mass spectrometer, coupled with fast UPLC and robust data processing, delivers high-confidence metabolite identifications. This approach enables in-depth characterization of drug-induced metabolic dynamics and supports improved toxicological evaluation.
References
1. Molloy et al. The Pharmacometabodynamics of Gefitinib after Intravenous Administration to Mice: A Preliminary UPLC-IM-MS Study. Metabolites. 2021;11(6):379.
2. Graichen et al. Effects of methapyrilene on rat hepatic xenobiotic enzymes and liver morphology. Fundam Appl Toxicol. 1985;5:165–174.
3. Tsugawa et al. MS-DIAL: data-independent MS/MS deconvolution for comprehensive metabolome analysis. Nat Methods. 2015;12:523–526.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Investigating Drug Metabolism of Methapyrilene Within a Rat Model Using a Data Dependent Acquisition Workflow with the Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer
2025|Waters|Applications
Application Note Investigating Drug Metabolism of Methapyrilene Within a Rat Model Using a Data Dependent Acquisition Workflow with the Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer Lee A. Gethingsa, Richard Locka, Susan Abatiellob, Jennifer Seymourc, Terri Sosienskic, Jeff Finchc, Jeremy Feltonc , Donald…
Key words
mrt, mrtmethapyrilene, methapyrileneinvestigating, investigatingxevo, xevorat, ratmetabolism, metabolismdrug, drugdependent, dependentmodel, modelworkflow, workflowspectrometer, spectrometeracquisition, acquisitionwithin, withindata, datamass
A Rapid Approach to Metabolite Identification Using Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer and MassMetaSite Software
2025|Waters|Applications
Application Note A Rapid Approach to Metabolite Identification Using Xevo MRT Mass Spectrometer and MassMetaSite Software Richard Lock, Robert Plumb, Lee Gethings Waters Corporation, United States Published on November 25, 2025 Abstract Metabolite identification is a critical component of drug…
Key words
massmetasite, massmetasitemrt, mrtpremier, premierxevo, xevoacquity, acquityprivacy, privacymetabolite, metabolitespectrometer, spectrometermethapyrilene, methapyrileneuplc, uplcbiotransformation, biotransformationsoftware, softwarerapid, rapidchromatography, chromatographyapproach
CONVERSION AND INTEGRATION OF OMICS DATA FROM A PROTOTYPE, BENCHTOP MULTI-REFLECTING TIME-OF-FLIGHT (MRT) PLATFORM WITH THIRD-PARTY INFORMATIC WORKFLOWS
2024|Waters|Posters
CONVERSION AND INTEGRATION OF OMICS DATA FROM A PROTOTYPE, BENCHTOP MULTI-REFLECTING TIME-OF-FLIGHT (MRT) PLATFORM WITH THIRD-PARTY INFORMATIC WORKFLOWS Lee A. Gethings, Ian Morns, Pete Reay, Simon Jones, Nyasha Munjoma, Jayne Kirk, Richard Lock Waters Corp., Wilmslow, Cheshire, United Kingdom OMIC…
Key words
mzml, mzmlxcms, xcmsdata, datamrt, mrtlipidomics, lipidomicsparty, partyanalytica, analyticadial, dialthird, thirdskyline, skylinewither, withervia, viamsdial, msdialnonsmokers, nonsmokersequisplash
Metabolomics Workflow using a Xevo™ MRT Mass Spectrometer
2024|Waters|Applications
Application Note Metabolomics Workflow using a Xevo™ MRT Mass Spectrometer Lisa Reid, Matthew E. Daly, Lee A. Gethings, Jayne Kirk Waters Corporation Abstract We demonstrate the acquisition and data processing to identify and pathway profile a typical metabolomic study acquired…
Key words
mrt, mrtxevo, xevometabolomics, metabolomicssmoker, smokerworkflow, workflowspectrometer, spectrometerurine, urinemass, massusing, usingsmokers, smokerspremier, premiernon, nonacquity, acquityunsupervised, unsupervisedbiomarkers