Debunne Nathan, De Spiegeleer Anton, Depuydt Dorian, Janssens Yorick, Descamps Amélie, Wynendaele Evelien, De Spiegeleer Bart
Drug Quality and Registration (DruQuaR) group, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Ghent University, Ottergemsesteenweg 460, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium.
Department of Geriatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University Hospital, C. Heymanslaan 10, Ghent B-9000, Belgium.
ACS Omega. 2020 Jun 22;5(26):16120-16127. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.0c01723. eCollection 2020 Jul 7.
Finding adequate biomarkers for rapid and accurate disease detection, prognosis, and therapy is increasingly important. Quorum-sensing peptides are herein a new emerging group, produced by bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and viruses, with blood being the most straightforward sample type to detect/quantitate them. However, detailed information about suitable blood sample collection methods and storage conditions for measuring these quorum-sensing peptides hampers further clinical research and development. Here, we first tested the time-dependent stability of a set of chemically diverse quorum-sensing peptides, spiked in blood at different temperatures (4, 21, and 37 °C) in four different ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA)-containing plasma tubes (with different protein-stabilizing additives) over a period of up to 7.5 h. Next, we determined the storage stability of these quorum-sensing peptides in plasma at different temperatures (4, -35, and -80 °C). UPLC/MS-MS was used to selectively detect and quantify the spiked quorum-sensing peptides. The results of this study indicate that a cost-effective tube, designed for traditional proteomics and stored at 4 °C, is the preferred collection condition when quorum-sensing peptides need to be detected/quantified in human plasma. When the tubes are handled at room temperature (21 °C), a more specialized tube is required. Long-term storage of plasma samples, even under low-temperature conditions (-80 °C), indicates rapid degradation of certain quorum-sensing peptides.
寻找用于快速准确疾病检测、预后评估和治疗的合适生物标志物变得越来越重要。群体感应肽是一个新出现的类别,由细菌、真菌、原生动物和病毒产生,血液是检测/定量它们最直接的样本类型。然而,关于测量这些群体感应肽的合适血液样本采集方法和储存条件的详细信息阻碍了进一步的临床研究和开发。在此,我们首先测试了一组化学性质各异的群体感应肽在四种不同的含乙二胺四乙酸(EDTA)血浆管(含不同蛋白质稳定添加剂)中,于不同温度(4、21和37°C)添加到血液中长达7.5小时的时间依赖性稳定性。接下来,我们确定了这些群体感应肽在不同温度(4、-35和-80°C)下血浆中的储存稳定性。采用超高效液相色谱/串联质谱法(UPLC/MS-MS)选择性检测和定量添加的群体感应肽。本研究结果表明,一种为传统蛋白质组学设计且储存在4°C的经济高效的试管,是在人血浆中检测/定量群体感应肽时的首选采集条件。当在室温(21°C)下处理试管时,则需要更专门的试管。血浆样本的长期储存,即使在低温条件下(-80°C),也表明某些群体感应肽会迅速降解。