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Quantitation of Limaprost, an Analogue of PGE1 in Human Plasma

Applications | 2017 | SCIEXInstrumentation
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QTRAP
Industries
Clinical Research
Manufacturer
SCIEX

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Quantitative determination of limaprost in human plasma is critical for its pharmacokinetic profiling and clinical monitoring. Achieving sub-pg/mL sensitivity while resolving endogenous interferences poses significant analytical challenges. A streamlined, high-throughput method enhances drug development efficiency and supports regulated bioanalysis.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study aimed to develop a simplified one-dimensional LC-MS/MS assay for limaprost quantitation by integrating differential mobility separation (DMS) on a QTRAP® 6500+ system. Key goals included reducing analysis time, lowering the limit of quantitation, and maintaining robust selectivity compared to existing two-dimensional LC-MS/MS methods.

Materials and Methods


Sample preparation followed a three-step solid-phase extraction of human plasma. Chromatography employed a Kinetex C18 column (2.1×50 mm, 1.7 µm) with a gradient of ammonium acetate (pH 4.5)/acetonitrile and a 15 min run at 0.3 mL/min. Mass spectrometric detection utilized multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) in negative-ion mode (m/z 379.2 > 299.3). A SelexION®+ DMS device applied a separation voltage and a compound-specific compensation voltage of –7.5 V to filter co-eluting species.

Used Instrumentation


  • SCIEX QTRAP® 6500+ LC-MS/MS system
  • SelexION®+ differential mobility separation device
  • Shimadzu Prominence LC system
  • Kinetex C18 column (Phenomenex Inc.)
  • Analyst® 1.6.3 and MultiQuant™ 3.0 software

Main Results and Discussion


The developed assay achieved a lower limit of quantitation of 0.3 pg/mL, with excellent linearity from 0.3 to 15 pg/mL using 1/x weighting. Three quality control levels (0.6, 3, and 12 pg/mL) demonstrated precision with CVs below 2%. Integration of SelexION+ doubled ion transmission, suppressed isobaric/isomeric interferences, and reduced background noise, resulting in superior signal-to-noise ratios on a single-dimension LC method.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Analysis time reduced over threefold (15 min vs. >50 min)
  • Sub-pg/mL sensitivity supports pharmacokinetic studies
  • Enhanced selectivity via orthogonal DMS separation
  • Rapid installation/removal of DMS device without breaking vacuum
  • High robustness and regulatory compliance for bioanalysis

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Advances in differential mobility spectrometry are expected to expand to other low-abundance biomolecules, enabling ultra-fast screening workflows. Integration with automated sample handling and machine-learning-guided optimization may further enhance throughput and method development. Broader adoption of DMS-enabled platforms could streamline regulated bioanalysis in clinical and industrial settings.

Conclusion


The one-dimensional LC-MS/MS assay combining a QTRAP 6500+ system with SelexION+ DMS offers a highly sensitive, selective, and efficient approach for limaprost quantitation in human plasma. It delivers significant improvements in speed, reproducibility, and ease of operation compared to traditional two-dimensional methods.

References


  1. Komaba J, Masuda Y, Hashimoto Y, et al. Ultra sensitive determination of limaprost, a prostaglandin E1 analogue, in human plasma using online two-dimensional reversed-phase liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. J Chromatogr B. 2007;852:590–7.
  2. Park YS, Park JH, Kim SH, et al. Pharmacokinetic characteristics of a vasodilatory and antiplatelet agent, limaprost alfadex, in healthy Korean volunteers. Clin Appl Thromb Hemost. 2010;16:326–33.

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