Abstract

A sensitive, specific, and robust method to simultaneously determine enantiomeric salsolinol (1-methyl-6,7-dihydroxy-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, SAL), a potential biomarker implicated in alcohol-related neurotoxicity in a stereoselective manner, and its precursor dopamine (DA) has been developed using simple chemical derivatization and chiral separation coupled with electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). SAL enantiomers and DA were converted to stable pentafluorobenzyl (PFB) derivatives directly from aqueous media. Bulky PFB groups introduced into the SAL structure enabled baseline separation of SAL stereoisomers on a chiral column without cumbersome chiral derivatization to unstable SAL diastereomers. Subsequent analysis by ESI-MS/MS with multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) in the presence of deuterium-labeled internal standards allowed specific detection of both derivatives with a wide dynamic range (SAL, 0.5-5000 pg; DA, 0.02-20 ng). The limit of quantitation assayed in the plasma matrix was below 10 pg for each SAL enantiomer and 100 pg for DA. Both coefficient of variance and error for inter- and intraday measurements in the blank plasma were less than 10% for SAL and DA in the concentration range of 10-4000 pg/mL and 0.1-8 ng/mL, respectively. This strategy enabled routine and specific determination of both SAL enantiomers and DA from 0.5 mL of human plasma and cerebrospinal fluid, which has not been possible using existing methodologies.

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