4.4 Article

Detection of metals and metalloproteins in the plasma of stroke patients by mass spectrometry methods

Journal

METALLOMICS
Volume 4, Issue 10, Pages 1077-1087

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c2mt20092a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for Clinical and Translational Science and Training grant (CCTST) [Institutional Clinical and Translational Science Award, NIH/NCRR] [ULIRR026314]
  2. University of Cincinnati College of Medicine
  3. University of Cincinnati Center for Environmental Genetics (CEG) [NIEHS P30-ES006096]

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Stroke is the leading cause of adult disability, worldwide. Metalloproteins and metals play key roles in epigenetic events in living organisms, including hypertension, the most important modifiable risk factor for stroke. Thus, metalloproteins may be important target biomarkers for disease diagnosis. The primary goal of this study was to assess metal containing proteins in blood plasma, detected by ICP-MS, followed by ESIMS for peptide/protein identification. We then compared the relative concentration differences between samples from patients with ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke and stroke mimics. In 29 plasma samples (10 stroke mimics, 10 ischemic stroke and 9 hemorrhagic stroke patients) previously collected from patients who presented to the University of Cincinnati Emergency Department within 12 hours of symptom onset for a plasma banking project. For the metal associated protein study, Mg, Mn, Cu, Se concentrations were statistically different when compared between stroke mimics vs. ischemic stroke patients and ischemic stroke patients vs. hemorrhagic stroke patients. Pb concentrations were statistically different when compared between stroke mimics vs. ischemic stroke patients and Mo levels were statistically the same among the three groups. In addition, we also report concentration levels and preliminary correlation studies for total elemental analysis among the three sets of patients. This pilot study demonstrates that mass spectrometry methods may be highly valuable in detecting novel stroke biomarkers in blood plasma. Expanded studies are warranted to confirm these findings.

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