Abstract

Microdialysis sampling coupled with liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC/ESI-MS/MS) was used to observe in vitro 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (HSD1) enzyme-catalyzed conversion of stable-isotope-labeled cortisone to cortisol in liver microsomes from dog, monkey, and human. Experimental conditions that would affect the microdialysis sampling approach including probe length, perfusion fluid flow rate, extraction efficiency ( E d ), substrate concentration, and enzyme reaction conditions were evaluated. Dialysates containing high salt concentrations (>150 mM) were directly assayed using LC/MS/MS without additional sample cleanup. The sensitivity (with lower level of quantitation at 0.1 ng/mL) and selectivity of this assay allowed detection of the enzyme reactants at physiologically relevant levels. The interconversion from M+4 cortisone to M+4 cortisol was detected in dog, human, and monkey liver microsomes. Results show species-specific reaction profiles, with a five times higher conversion rate in dog liver microsomes than in human and monkey liver microsomes. Based on M+4 cortisol production rate obtained using a microdialysis infusion of M+4 cortisone to the microsomes coincubated with a proprietary 11β-HSD1 inhibitor of different concentrations, the degrees of enzyme inhibition were found to be 40 and 85%, consistent with values obtained by a traditional in vitro incubation method. The microdialysis sampling methodology with LC/MS/MS provided extensive information about 11β-HSD1 activities in microsomes from different mammalian species.

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