Scientific Reports (Jun 2017)

Comparing DNA enrichment of proliferating cells following administration of different stable isotopes of heavy water

  • Don E. Farthing,
  • Nataliya P. Buxbaum,
  • Philip J. Lucas,
  • Natella Maglakelidze,
  • Brittany Oliver,
  • Jiun Wang,
  • Kevin Hu,
  • Ehydel Castro,
  • Catherine V. Bare,
  • Ronald E. Gress

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04404-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Deuterated water (2H2O) is a label commonly used for safe quantitative measurement of deuterium enrichment into DNA of proliferating cells. More recently, it has been used for labeling proteins and other biomolecules. Our in vitro - in vivo research reports important stable isotopic labeling enrichment differences into the DNA nucleosides and their isotopologues (e.g. deoxyadenosine (dA) M + 1, dA M + 2, dA M + 3), as well as tumor cell proliferation effects for various forms of commercially available stable heavy water (2H2O, H2 18O, and 2H2 18O). Using an in vitro mouse thymus tumor cell line, we determined that H2 18O provides superior DNA labeling enrichment quantitation, as measured by GC-positive chemical ionization (PCI)-MS/MS. In addition, at higher but physiologically relevant doses, both 2H2 18O and 2H2O down modulated mouse thymus tumor cell proliferation, whereas H2 18O water had no observable effects on cell proliferation. The in vivo labeling studies, where normal mouse bone marrow cells (i.e. high turnover) were evaluated post labeling, demonstrated DNA enrichments concordant with measurements from the in vitro studies. Our research also reports a headspace-GC-NCI-MS method, which rapidly and quantitatively measures stable heavy water levels in total body water.