4.4 Article

Determination of glutathione disulfide levels in biological samples using thiol-disulfide exchanging agent, dithiothreitol

Journal

BIOMEDICAL CHROMATOGRAPHY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 119-123

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bmc.1083

Keywords

GSH; GSSG; DTT; thiol-disulfide exchange; HPLC

Funding

  1. NIH [R15DA023409-01A2]

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A reverse-phase HPLC method incorporating dithiothreitol (DTT) reduction for quantitative determination of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) in biological samples is described here. This method is based on our previous enzymatic reduction technique that uses N-1-(pyrenyl) maleimide (NPM) as a derivatizing agent. In our earlier method, glutathione disulfide (GSSG) was measured by first reducing it to GSH with glutathione reductase (GR) in the presence of NADPH. However, this is a very costly and time-consuming technique. The method described here employs a common and inexpensive thiol-disulfide exchanging agent, DTT, for reduction of GSSG to GSH, followed by derivatization with NPM. The calibration curves are linear over a concentration range of 25-1250 nM (r(2) > 0.995). The coefficients of variations for intra-run precision and inter-run precision range from 0.49 to 5.10% with an accuracy range of 1.78-6.15%. The percentage of relative recovery ranges from 97.3 to 103.2%. This new method provides a simple, efficient, and cost-effective way of determining glutathione disulfide levels with a 2.5 nM limit of detection per 5 mu L injection volume. Copyright (c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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