Abstract

Choline and related metabolites are key factors in many metabolic processes, and insufficient supply can adversely affect reproduction and fetal development. Choline status is mainly regulated by intake, and human milk is the only choline source for exclusively breastfed infants. Further, maternal status, genotype, and phenotype, as well as infant outcomes, have been related to milk choline concentrations. In order to enable the rapid assessment of choline intake for exclusively breastfed infants and to further investigate the associations between milk choline and maternal and infant status and other outcomes, we have developed a simplified method for the simultaneous analysis of human milk choline, glycerophosphocholine, phosphocholine, and the less abundant related metabolites betaine, carnitine, creatinine, dimethylglycine (DMG), methionine, and trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) using ultraperformance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC–MS/MS). These analytes have milk concentrations ranging over 3 orders of magnitude. Unlike other recently described LC-based methods, our approach does not require an ion-pairing reagent or high concentrations of solvent modifiers for successful analyte separation and thus avoid signal loss and potential permanent contamination. Milk samples (10 μl) were diluted (1:80) in water : methanol (1:4, v:v) and filtered prior to analysis with an optimized gradient of 0.1% propionic acidaq and acetonitrile, allowing efficient separation and removal of contaminants. Recovery rates ranged from 108.0 to 130.9% (inter-day variation: 3.3–9.6%), and matrix effects (MEs) from 54.1 to 114.3%. MEs were greater for carnitine, creatinine, and TMAO at lower dilution (1:40, p < 0.035 for all), indicating concentration-dependent ion suppression. Milk from Brazilian women (2–8, 28–50, and 88–119 days postpartum, ntotal = 53) revealed increasing concentration throughout lactation for glycerophosphocholine, DMG, and methionine, while carnitine decreased. Choline and phosphocholine were negatively correlated consistently at all three collection time intervals. The method is suitable for rapid analysis of human milk water-soluble forms of choline as well as previously not captured related metabolites with minimal sample volumes and preparation.

Highlights

  • Choline, an essential micronutrient, is a key factor in cellular maintenance and growth, including brain function, liver health, reproduction, and fetal and infant development [1,2,3,4]

  • Choline chloride, trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) (d9), creatinine (N-methyl-d3), L-carnitine, and betaine-d11 were purchased from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories (Tewksbury, MA, USA), and sn-glycero-3-PCho was purchased from AK Scientific (Union City, CA, USA)

  • To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported method for human milk water-soluble choline that includes the simultaneous analysis of six additional choline-related metabolites

Read more

Summary

Introduction

An essential micronutrient, is a key factor in cellular maintenance and growth, including brain function, liver health, reproduction, and fetal and infant development [1,2,3,4]. Maternal plasma choline is elevated, likely due to protecting intact choline, and not by upregulated de novo synthesis by the PEMT pathway as found in pregnancy [18]. These reported higher maternal choline concentrations are thought to support increased infant needs in the first year of life, during which choline is a key factor for organ growth and membrane biosynthesis, and ensure efficient choline uptake by the brain and other tissues [15, 19]

Methods
Results
Discussion
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