High performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry dual extraction method for identification of green tea catechin metabolites excreted in human urine.
Kayleigh A Clarke, Tristan P Dew, Rachel E B Watson, Mark D Farrar, Susan Bennett, Anna Nicolaou, Lesley E Rhodes, Gary Williamson
Index: J. Chromatogr. B. Analyt. Technol. Biomed. Life Sci. 972 , 29-37, (2014)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
The simultaneous analysis of free-form and conjugated flavonoids in the same sample is difficult but necessary to properly estimate their bioavailability. A method was developed to optimise the extraction of both free and conjugated forms of catechins and metabolites in a biological sample following the consumption of green tea. A double-blind randomised controlled trial was performed in which 26 volunteers consumed daily green tea and vitamin C supplements and 24 consumed a placebo for 3 months. Urine was collected for 24h at 4 separate time points (pre- and post-consumption) to confirm compliance to the supplementation and to distinguish between placebo and supplementation consumption. The urine was assessed for both free and conjugated metabolites of green tea using LC-MS(2) analysis, after a combination extraction method, which involved an ethyl acetate extraction followed by an acetonitrile protein precipitation. The combination method resulted in a good recovery of EC-O-sulphate (91±7%), EGC-O-glucuronide (94±6%), EC (95±6%), EGC (111±5%) and ethyl gallate (74±3%). A potential total of 55 catechin metabolites were investigated, and of these, 26 conjugated (with methyl, glucuronide or sulphate groups) and 3 free-form (unconjugated) compounds were identified in urine following green tea consumption. The majority of EC and EGC conjugates significantly increased post-consumption of green tea in comparison to baseline (pre-supplementation) samples. The conjugated metabolites associated with the highest peak areas were O-methyl-EC-O-sulphate and the valerolactones M6/M6'-O-sulphate. In line with previous studies, EC and EGC were only identified as conjugated derivatives, and EGCG and ECG were not found as mono-conjugated or free-forms. In summary, the method reported here provides a good recovery of catechin compounds and is appropriate for use in the assessment of flavonoid bioavailability, particularly for biological tissues that may contain endogenous deconjugating enzymes. Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
2014-01-01
[PLoS ONE 9(9) , e108055, (2014)]
2015-01-01
[Toxicol. Sci. 143(1) , 54-63, (2014)]
Hypoxia reduces MAX expression in endothelial cells by unproductive splicing.
2014-12-20
[FEBS Lett. 588(24) , 4784-90, (2014)]
2015-04-03
[Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 459(2) , 246-51, (2015)]
2014-07-01
[Ann. Biomed. Eng. 42(7) , 1381-90, (2014)]