4.4 Article

Measurement of S-methylcysteine and S-methyl-mercapturic acid in human urine by alkyl-chloroformate extractive derivatization and isotope-dilution gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

Journal

BIOMEDICAL CHROMATOGRAPHY
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 330-343

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/bmc.1451

Keywords

Husek derivatization; isotope dilution; S-methyl-cysteine; S-methyl-mercapturic acid; urine

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S-methylcysteine (SMC) is a minor amino acid naturally excreted in human urine, a protective agent against oxidative stress and a biotransformation product of the fumigant biocide methyl bromide and of nicotine. A metabolic source of SMC is catabolism of the repair catalytic protein MGMT (EC 2.1.1.37), which specifically removes the methyl group from the modified DNA nucleotide O-6-methyl-guanine to revert the normal GC base pairing. To assess the value of SMC and of S-methylmercapturic acid (SMMA) as candidate biomarkers of proliferative phenomena, a sensitive analytical method by GC-MS was applied in a pilot study of healthy subjects to assess their urinary elimination and the intra- and inter-individual variability. Extractive alkylation with butylchloroformate-n-butanol-pyridine (Husek technique) was employed for sample derivatization and isotope dilution GC-MS with S-[CD(3)]-SMC and -SMMA was applied for specific and sensitive detection. To resolve the target analytes from the main coeluting interferents in the derivatized urine extract a medium-polarity stationary phase was employed. SMMA was not detected in the morning urine of three healthy fertile-age women followed for one month above the minimum detectable level of approx. 500 mu g/L while SMC concentrations were in the 0.02-0.7 mu g/mL range (n = 61) with large inter-day and inter-individual variations. In a young healthy male urine samples taken throughout a few days yielded concentrations in the same 90-810 mu g/L range (n = 11). These preliminary results points at SMC as a candidate biomarker for the study of methylation turnover in several biochemical processes. Copyright (C) 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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