Abstract

We compared two HPLC methods (anion exchange [AE] and steric exclusion [SE]) for analysis of mouse lipoprotein profiles by determining coefficients of variability (CVs) under varying conditions. CVs for AE and SE were comparable on fresh samples. There was an inverse relationship between subfraction curve area and CV [r = -0.65 (AE) and -0.50 (SE)], consistent with the interpretation that as curve area decreased, error variance increased and signal-to-noise ratio decreased. Sample storage did not affect SE. In contrast, with AE, alterations in measured lipoproteins were apparent after storage, including a decrease in the HDL subfraction [66.8% (baseline) vs. 15.9% (1 week); P < 0.01] and an increase in areas under LDL and VLDL peaks. Concomitant with decreasing HDL area, reproducibility deteriorated with the duration of storage. Analysis of the effects of decreasing sample injectate volume to <25 microl on SE lipoprotein subfractions revealed that areas under LDL and VLDL peaks decreased and persisted as volume was decreased further. Areas under all lipoprotein subfractions measured with either AE or SE were linearly correlated with the amount of cholesterol [r = 0.69 (AE) and 0.87 (SE)]. Both AE and SE yield reproducible, accurate, and rapid measurements of lipoproteins from small amounts of serum. AE yields more sensitive, high-amplitude, well-defined peaks that can be easily distinguished and necessitates the use of smaller sample volumes compared with SE, but sample storage causes alterations in the chromatogram. SE appears better suited to serial analyses involving stored samples.

Highlights

  • We compared two HPLC methods for analysis of mouse lipoprotein profiles by determining coefficients of variability (CVs) under varying conditions

  • Analysis of lipoprotein subfractions and their relationship to both normal and pathologic conditions is essential to a diverse set of ongoing investigations, but current analytic methods suffer from a number of disadvantages [13,14,15]

  • For an example of a hypercholesterolemic mouse, we examined serum from apolipoprotein E (apoE) null mice using SE (Fig. 3B; red chromatogram)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We compared two HPLC methods (anion exchange [AE] and steric exclusion [SE]) for analysis of mouse lipoprotein profiles by determining coefficients of variability (CVs) under varying conditions. With AE, alterations in measured lipoproteins were apparent after storage, including a decrease in the HDL subfraction [66.8% (baseline) vs 15.9% (1 week); P Ͻ 0.01] and an increase in areas under LDL and VLDL peaks. Analysis of the effects of decreasing sample injectate volume to Ͻ25 ␮l on SE lipoprotein subfractions revealed that areas under LDL and VLDL peaks decreased and persisted as volume was decreased further. We compared the reproducibility and sample storage duration of two HPLC analytic methods: anion-exchange (AE) [17,18,19] and steric-exclusion (SE) [20] chromatography

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call