PLoS ONE (Jul 2008)

Advances in quantitative hepcidin measurements by time-of-flight mass spectrometry.

  • Dorine W Swinkels,
  • Domenico Girelli,
  • Coby Laarakkers,
  • Joyce Kroot,
  • Natascia Campostrini,
  • Erwin H J M Kemna,
  • Harold Tjalsma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0002706
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 7
p. e2706

Abstract

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Assays for the detection of the iron regulatory hormone hepcidin in plasma or urine have not yet been widely available, whereas quantitative comparisons between hepcidin levels in these different matrices were thus far even impossible due to technical restrictions. To circumvent these limitations, we here describe several advances in time-of flight mass spectrometry (TOF MS), the most important of which concerned spiking of a synthetic hepcidin analogue as internal standard into serum and urine samples. This serves both as a control for experimental variation, such as recovery and matrix-dependent ionization and ion suppression, and at the same time allows value assignment to the measured hepcidin peak intensities. The assay improvements were clinically evaluated using samples from various patients groups and its relevance was further underscored by the significant correlation of serum hepcidin levels with serum iron indices in healthy individuals. Most importantly, this approach allowed kinetic studies as illustrated by the paired analyses of serum and urine samples, showing that more than 97% of the freely filtered serum hepcidin can be reabsorbed in the kidney. Thus, the here reported advances in TOF MS-based hepcidin measurements represent critical steps in the accurate quantification of hepcidin in various body fluids and pave the way for clinical studies on the kinetic behavior of hepcidin in both healthy and diseased states.