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ABSTRACT: This work describes a novel liquid chromatography tandem MS (LC-MS/MS) method for the determination of ratios of acylcarnitines arising from acyl-CoA substrates and products that reflect metabolic disturbances caused by marginal biotin deficiency. The urinary ratios reflecting reduced activities of biotin-dependent enzymes include the following: 1) the ratio of 3-hydroxyisovalerylcarnitine : 3-methylglutarylcarnitine (3HIAc : MGc) for methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase; 2) the ratio of propionylcarnitine:methylmalonylcarnitine (Pc : MMc) for propionyl-CoA carboxylase (PCC); and 3) the ratio of acetylcarnitine : malonylcarnitine (Ac : Mc) for acetyl-CoA carboxylase. To demonstrate the suitability of the LC-MS/MS method for biomonitoring, we measured the 3 ratios for 7 healthy adults at various time points (d 0, 14, and 28) during the induction of marginal biotin through the consumption of egg white. The mean change in the Pc : MMc ratio relative to d 0 was 5.3-fold by d 14 (P = 0.0049) and 8.5-fold by d 28 (P = 0.0042). The mean change in the 3HIAc : MGc ratio was 2.8-fold by d 14 (P = 0.0022) and 3.8-fold by d 28 (P = 0.0001). The mean change in the Ac : Mc ratio was 2.9-fold by d 14 (P = 0.03) and 4.7-fold by d 28 (P = 0.02). The results suggest that simultaneous assessment of ratios of multiple biotin-dependent pathways offers insight into the complex metabolic disturbances caused by marginal biotin deficiency. We hypothesize that one or a combination of the ratios might be more sensitive or robust with respect to other nutrient deficiencies or confounding metabolic processes.
Journal of Nutrition 07/2012; 142(9):1621-5. · 3.92 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: To date, marginal, asymptomatic biotin deficiency has been successfully induced experimentally by the use of labor-intensive inpatient designs requiring rigorous dietary control. We sought to determine if marginal biotin deficiency could be induced in humans in a less expensive outpatient design incorporating a self-selected, mixed general diet. We sought to examine the efficacy of three outpatient study designs: two based on oral avidin dosing and one based on a diet high in undenatured egg white for a period of 28 d. In study design 1, participants (n = 4; 3 women) received avidin in capsules with a biotin binding capacity of 7 times the estimated dietary biotin intake of a typical self-selected diet. In study design 2, participants (n = 2; 2 women) received double the amount of avidin capsules (14 times the estimated dietary biotin intake). In study design 3, participants (n = 5; 3 women) consumed egg-white beverages containing avidin with a biotin binding capacity of 7 times the estimated dietary biotin intake. Established indices of biotin status [lymphocyte propionyl-CoA carboxylase activity; urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid, 3-hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine), and biotin; and plasma concentration of 3HIA-carnitine] indicated that study designs 1 and 2 were not effective in inducing marginal biotin deficiency, but study design 3 was as effective as previous inpatient study designs that induced deficiency by egg-white beverage. Marginal biotin deficiency can be induced experimentally by using a cost-effective outpatient design by avidin delivery in egg-white beverages. This design should be useful to the broader nutritional research community.
Journal of Nutrition 12/2011; 142(1):22-6. · 3.92 Impact Factor
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Donald M Mock,
Shawna L Stratton, Thomas D Horvath,
Anna Bogusiewicz,
Nell I Matthews,
Cindy L Henrich,
Amanda M Dawson,
Horace J Spencer,
Suzanne N Owen,
Gunnar Boysen,
Jeffery H Moran
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ABSTRACT: Experimentally increasing metabolic flux in a pathway in which an essential step is catalyzed by a vitamin-dependent enzyme (a challenge test) has been used in assessing functional vitamin status and elucidating common and alternate metabolic pathways. Conversion of 3-methylcrotonyl CoA to 3-methylglutaconyl CoA in the leucine catabolic pathway is catalyzed by the biotin-dependent enzyme methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase (MCC). Marginal biotin deficiency reduces MCC activity and increases urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid (3HIA) and 3-hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine) measured in 24-h urine collections. We assessed urinary excretion of 3HIA and 3HIA-carnitine in response to a leucine challenge in humans made progressively biotin deficient by egg white consumption. In 2 cohorts of healthy adults (Study 1: n = 5; Study 2: n = 7) rendered biotin deficient over 28 d, urinary excretion of 3HIA and 3HIA-carnitine in response to a leucine challenge was quantitated weekly for 3 or 4 wk, respectively. In both studies, mean urinary excretion of both 3HIA and 3HIA-carnitine increased >2-fold by d 14 (P < 0.002 for both indicators for both studies). Diagnostically, both indicators were highly sensitive, but diagnostic sensitivities were not superior to those of 24-h excretion of 3HIA and 3HIA-carnitine. These studies provide evidence that urinary excretions of 3HIA and 3HIA-carnitine in response to an oral leucine challenge are early and sensitive indicators of marginal biotin deficiency in humans. The variability of the proportion of leucine catabolites excreted as 3HIA suggests substantial population heterogeneity in the metabolic capacity of the 3HIA-carnitine detoxification pathway.
Journal of Nutrition 09/2011; 141(11):1925-30. · 3.92 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Measurement of 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid (3HIA) in human urine has been shown to be a useful indicator of biotin status for a variety of clinical situations, including pregnancy. The work described herein presents a novel UPLC-MS/MS method for accurate and precise quantitation of urinary 3HIA. This method utilizes sample preparation prior to quantitation that has been simplified compared to the previous GC-MS method. To demonstrate the suitability of the UPLC-MS/MS method for human bio-monitoring, this method was used to measure 3-HIA in 64 human urine samples from eight healthy adults in whom marginal biotin deficiency had been induced experimentally by egg white feeding. 3HIA was detected in all specimens; the mean concentration [±standard deviation (SD)] was 80.6 ± 51 μM prior to inducing biotin deficiency. Mean excretion rate for 3HIA (expressed per mol urinary creatinine) before beginning the biotin-deficient diet was 8.5 ± 3.2 mmol 3HIA per mol creatinine and the mean increased threefold with deficiency. These specimens had been previously analyzed by GC-MS; the two data sets showed strong linear relationship with a correlation coefficient of 0.97. These results provide evidence that this method is suitable for bio-monitoring of biotin status in larger populations.
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry 09/2011; 401(9):2805-10. · 3.78 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Mounting evidence indicates that marginal biotin deficiency is not rare, contrary to previous assumptions. Accordingly, robust indicators of biotin status would be useful. In a study of 10 healthy adults, we recently provided evidence that abnormally increased plasma concentration of 3-hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine) is a sensitive indicator of marginal biotin deficiency. We sought to determine whether urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine (expressed as the ratio to urinary creatinine) significantly increases in marginal biotin deficiency. Marginal, asymptomatic biotin deficiency was induced experimentally in the same 10 healthy adults (8 women) by feeding undenatured egg white with meals for 28 d. Biotin status was repleted by a mixed general diet plus biotin supplementation. Urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine was determined by liquid chromatography-tandem MS on d 0, 14, and 28 (depletion) and on d 35 and 50 (repletion). Mean urinary 3HIA-carnitine concentration increased with depletion (P < 0.0001; d 0 vs. 28) and decreased with repletion (P = 0.0002; d 28 vs. 50). Urinary 3HIA-carnitine excretion was greater than the upper limit of normal in 9 of 10 participants by d 14 and decreased to within normal limits by d 50 in all participants. This study provides evidence that urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine is an early and sensitive indicator of marginal biotin deficiency. The ease of collection of untimed urine samples and application of a new analytical method with simplified sample preparation suggest that urinary 3HIA-carnitine is likely to be a useful indicator for large population studies.
Journal of Nutrition 03/2011; 141(3):353-8. · 3.92 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Blood-based indicators of biotin status in humans were shown to be useful tools in several clinical situations, including pregnancy. We previously validated the activity of the biotin-dependent enzyme propionyl-coenzyme A carboxylase (PCC) in lymphocytes as a sensitive and specific blood-based indicator of marginal degrees of biotin deficiency. However, the measurement of PCC activity in population studies presents substantial analytic challenges. 3-Hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine) increases in response to the decreased activity of the biotin-dependent enzyme methylcrotonyl-coenzyme A carboxylase and might reflect biotin status.
We sought to determine whether the plasma concentration of 3HIA-carnitine increases significantly in marginal biotin deficiency.
We experimentally induced marginal, asymptomatic biotin deficiency in 10 healthy adults (8 women) by having the subjects consume undenatured egg white for 28 d; biotin status was then repleted. Plasma concentrations of 3HIA-carnitine were measured on days 0, 14, 28, 35, and 50 by liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy.
The mean plasma 3HIA-carnitine concentration increased with depletion (P < 0.0001) and decreased with repletion (P < 0.0001). Plasma 3HIA-carnitine concentrations were greater than the upper limit of normal concentrations in 7 of 10 subjects by day 14 and in 9 of 10 subjects by day 28 and decreased to within normal limits in 9 of 10 subjects by day 50.
These studies provide evidence that 3HIA-carnitine is an early and sensitive indicator of marginal biotin deficiency. The ease of sample collection, small sample volume requirement, and stability of 3HIA-carnitine during storage suggest that plasma 3HIA-carnitine concentration is likely to be a useful indicator of marginal biotin deficiency for larger population studies.
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 10/2010; 92(6):1399-405. · 6.67 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Abnormally increased urinary excretion of 3-hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine) results from impairment in leucine catabolism caused by reduced activity of the biotin-dependent enzyme 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. Accordingly, urinary 3HIA-carnitine might reflect biotin status. Here, we describe an LC-MS/MS method for accurately quantitating the urinary concentration of 3HIA-carnitine at concentrations that are typical for excretion rates that are normal or only modestly increased. This method allows for high sample throughput and does not require solid-phase extraction. We used this method to provide evidence validating urinary 3HIA-carnitine as a biomarker of biotin deficiency in humans. Four healthy adult subjects were successfully made marginally biotin deficient by feeding a 30% egg white diet for 28 days. From study day 0 to 28, the mean urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine increased 3.5-fold (p = 0.026). These preliminary results indicate that urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine increases with marginal biotin deficiency. If these results are confirmed in studies involving larger numbers of subjects, urinary excretion of 3HIA-carnitine may potentially be a clinically useful indicator of biotin status.
Analytical Chemistry 10/2010; 82(22):9543-8. · 5.86 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: An increased plasma concentration of 3-hydroxyisovaleryl carnitine (3HIA-carnitine) results from impairment in the leucine catabolic pathway at the conversion of 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA to 3-methylglutaconyl-CoA. The impairment is caused by reduced activity of the biotin-dependent enzyme 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase. Here, we describe an LC-MS/MS method for the quantitation of 3HIA-carnitine in plasma and present preliminary evidence validating plasma 3HIA-carnitine as a novel biomarker of biotin deficiency in humans. Three healthy adult subjects were successfully made marginally biotin deficient by feeding of a 30% egg-white diet for 28 days. For each subject, the plasma 3HIA-carnitine increased approximately 3-fold from Study Day 0 to Study Day 28 (p = 0.027). These results indicate that plasma 3HIA-carnitine concentration increases with biotin deficiency. If these results are confirmed in larger studies, plasma 3HIA-carnitine is likely to be an important indicator of biotin status in a variety of clinical circumstances because quantitation of 3HIA-carnitine by this method has several technical advantages over existing validated indicators of biotin status in humans.
Analytical Chemistry 05/2010; 82(10):4140-4. · 5.86 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: This work describes ratiometric photoacoustic chemical sensing of pH, and describes how these measurements can be applied as a ratiometric biomedical imaging modality to image pH in intact biological tissue.
The Analyst 07/2008; 133(6):747-9. · 4.23 Impact Factor