Journal of Lipid Research (Apr 2019)

A new LC-MS assay for the quantitative analysis of vitamin K metabolites in human urine[S]

  • Matthew G. McDonald,
  • Catherine K. Yeung,
  • Aaron M. Teitelbaum,
  • Amanda L. Johnson,
  • Shinya Fujii,
  • Hiroyuki Kagechika,
  • Allan E. Rettie

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 60, no. 4
pp. 892 – 899

Abstract

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Vitamin K (VK), in both its phylloquinone and menaquinone forms, has been hypothesized to undergo ω- and β-oxidation on its hydrophobic side chain in order to generate the observed urinary metabolites, K acid I and K acid II, which are excreted primarily as glucuronide conjugates. Synthetic standards of K acid I, K acid II, and a putative intermediate metabolite, menaquinone (MK)1 ω-COOH, were used to develop and optimize a new atmospheric pressure negative chemical ionization LC-MS/MS assay for the quantitation of these compounds in urine from untreated individuals and subjects treated with a high dose VK supplement. VK catabolites were extracted from urine, deconjugated, and converted to their methyl ester derivatives using previously reported methodology. The assay showed a high degree of sensitivity, with limits of detection below 10–50 fmol of metabolite per milliliter of urine, as well as an inter-assay precision of 8–12%. Metabolite standards provided unambiguous evidence for MK1 ω-COOH as a new human urinary metabolite of VK. This assay provides a minimally invasive, highly sensitive, and specific alternative for monitoring VK status in humans.

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