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Erschienen in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease 5/2011

Open Access 01.10.2011 | Original Article

Prenatal screening of sialic acid storage disease and confirmation in cultured fibroblasts by LC-MS/MS

verfasst von: Jeroen van den Bosch, Linda F. Oemardien, Malgorzata I. Srebniak, Monique Piraud, Jan G. M. Huijmans, Frans W. Verheijen, George J. G. Ruijter

Erschienen in: Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | Ausgabe 5/2011

Abstract

Sialic acid storage disease (SASD) is an inborn error resulting from defects in the lysosomal membrane protein sialin. The SASD phenotypical spectrum ranges from a severe presentation, infantile sialic acid storage disease (ISSD) which may present as hydrops fetalis, to a relatively mild form, Salla disease. Screening for SASD is performed by determination of free sialic acid (FSA) in urine or amniotic fluid supernatant (AFS). Subsequent diagnosis of SASD is performed by quantification of FSA in cultured fibroblasts and by mutation analysis of the sialin gene, SLC17A5. We describe simple quantitative procedures to determine FSA as well as conjugated sialic acid in AFS, and FSA in cultured fibroblasts, using isotope dilution (13C3-sialic acid) and multiple reaction monitoring LC-ESI-MS/MS. The whole procedure can be performed in 2–4 h. Reference values in AFS were 0–8.2 μmol/L for 15–25 weeks of gestation and 3.2-12.0 μmol/L for 26–38 weeks of gestation. In AFS samples from five fetuses affected with ISSD FSA was 23.9-58.9 μmol/L demonstrating that this method is able to discriminate ISSD pregnancies from normal ones. The method was also validated for determination of FSA in fibroblast homogenates. FSA in SASD fibroblasts (ISSD; 20–154 nmol/mg protein, intermediate SASD; 12.9-15.1 nmol/mg, Salla disease; 5.9-7.4 nmol/mg) was clearly elevated compared to normal controls (0.3-2.2 nmol/mg). In conclusion, we report simple quantitative procedures to determine FSA in AFS and cultured fibroblasts improving both prenatal diagnostic efficacy for ISSD as well as confirmatory testing in cultured fibroblasts following initial screening in urine or AFS.
Hinweise
Communicated by: Cornelis Jakobs
Competing interest: None declared
Abkürzungen
AFS
Amniotic fluid supernatant
CSA
Conjugated sialic acid
CVS
Chorion villus sample
FSA
Free sialic acid
IS
Internal standard
ISSD
Infantile sialic acid storage disease
QC
Quality control
SA
Sialic acid
SASD
sialic acid storage disease
TSA
Total sialic acid

Introduction

Sialic acid storage disease (SASD) is an autosomal recessive disorder resulting from a defect in sialin, a protein involved in transport of sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid) across the lysosomal membrane (Suwannarat 2005, Verheijen et al. 1999). SASD exhibits a broad phenotypical spectrum (Aula et al. 2000). The main features of a severe presentation, infantile sialic acid storage disease (ISSD; OMIM 269920), include coarse facies, hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, developmental delay and early death. ISSD may present as hydrops fetalis (Froissart et al. 2005, Lefebvre et al. 1999). A mild presentation, Salla disease (OMIM 604369), exists mainly in the Finnish population and is characterised by hypotonia, developmental delay and ataxia (Varho et al. 2002).
Sialin deficiency results in accumulation of free sialic acid (FSA) in lysosomes of many cell types. Tissue accumulation of FSA is reflected by increased excretion in urine allowing for postnatal screening of SASD by determination of FSA. Once elevated urinary excretion is established, confirmation of SASD is possible by quantification of FSA in cultured fibroblasts or by mutation analysis of the sialin gene, SLC17A5 (Verheijen et al. 1999).
Prenatal diagnosis of SASD in families with a known index case is preferentially performed by mutation analysis (Aula and Aula 2006). However, to investigate ISSD (along other possible causes) in prenatal studies of hydrops fetalis, measurement of FSA in amniotic fluid supernatant (AFS) is more appropriate as a first screening test.
Traditional methods for determination of sialic acid in urine and AFS include spectrophotometric or fluorimetric thiobarbituric acid assays (‘Warren test’), thin-layer chromatography (TLC), enzymatic tests and HPLC using UV or fluorimetric detection (Gopaul and Crook 2006). In the Warren test interfering substances, such as sugars, may contribute to absorbance, resulting in false positive measurements, while in TLC a moderate elevation of FSA may be overlooked. In CVS or cultured fibroblasts/amniocytes HPLC with pulsed amperometric detection has been used (Renlund and Aula 1987, Renlund et al. 1986). The thiobarbituric assay can be used for cell homogenates, but requires extensive sample clean-up by ion exchange chromatography (Mancini et al. 1992).
Recently, LC-MS/MS methods have been reported to quantify FSA in urine (Van der Ham et al. 2007) and cerebrospinal fluid (Van der Ham et al. 2010). In this report we describe simple quantitative procedures using LC-MS/MS to assay FSA in AFS as well as in cultured fibroblasts.

Materials and methods

Reagents

Formic acid (98%), acetonitrile, water (HPLC grade), ammonium formate (>99% p.a), and sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid ≥98%) were purchased from Fluka (St. Louis, MO, USA). Sulfuric acid (95-97%) and Sialyllactose from human milk (≥ 97%) was obtained from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). 1,2,3-13C3-N-acetylneuraminic acid (internal standard, IS) was obtained from Omicron Biochemicals (South Bend, IN, USA).

Sample preparation

Amniotic fluid samples (n = 151) were obtained from control pregnancies after routine prenatal testing was completed in the laboratory of prenatal cytogenetics in our university hospital. These control pregnancies (not affected with SASD) were used to determine reference values for FSA and CSA in the second and third trimester of pregnancy. Amniotic fluid supernatant (AFS) was prepared by centrifugation for 10 min at 15000 x g. AFS samples were stored at −80°C for 0–2 years. Five AFS samples from fetuses affected with ISSD were obtained from the Laboratoire des Maladies Héréditaires du Métabolisme et Dépistage Néonatal, Centre de Biologie Est, Hospices Civils de Lyon, France. These samples were stored at −20°C for 0–7 years prior to FSA determination. Another 11 AFS samples from control pregnancies (not affected with SASD), stored at −20°C for 6–8 years, were used to assess whether storage temperature had an effect on FSA concentration in AFS. In addition, six AFS samples from hydrops fetalis pregnancies not caused by ISSD were analysed.
For analysis of FSA, 25 μL of IS (0.85 mmol/L) was added to 125 μL AFS. For analysis of total sialic acid (TSA) 25 μl IS (0.85 mmol/L) was added to 25 μl of AFS, followed by addition of 100 μL sulphuric acid (63 mmol/L) and incubation for 1 h at 80°C to release all conjugated sialic acid (CSA). Samples were analysed after cooling down. CSA was calculated by subtraction of FSA from TSA and expressed as nmol/mg protein. Protein concentration in AFS was determined using the Pierce BCA Protein Assay kit (Thermo Scientific) according to the instructions of the manufacturer.
Skin fibroblast cultures of 10 patients carrying a deficiency of sialin (six affected with ISSD, two with intermediate form of SASD and two with Salla disease) as well as cultures from 24 controls (not affected with SASD) were provided by the European Cell Bank, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Fibroblasts were cultured under standard conditions in Ham’s F10 medium supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum, harvested by trypsinisation and stored as cell pellets at −80°C. A cell pellet was prepared from one 75 cm2 flask. Homogenates were prepared by resuspending one cell pellet in 200 μL of IS (85 μmol/L) followed by sonication for 10 sec at 130 W. Ten μL of homogenate was taken out to determine protein as described above. For analysis of FSA, 300 μL of acetonitril was added to the remaining cell homogenate. Following mixing the solution was centrifuged (10 min at 15000 × g) and the supernatant was transferred to a glass vial and dried under a flow of nitrogen. The residue was dissolved in 200 μL HPLC water and analysed.

Calibration curve

An eight-point calibration curve with concentrations of 0, 5, 10, 50, 100, 200, 425 and 850 μmol/L SA in HPLC water was prepared. To 125 μL of each of the standards 25 μL of IS (0.85 mmol/L) was added.

LC-MS/MS

The LC-MS/MS system consisted of a TSQ Quantum triple quadrupole mass spectrometer, interfaced with an electron spray ionisation source (Thermo Scientific, USA) connected to a Surveyor autosampler and Surveyor MS Pump Plus (Thermo Sientific). Using the autosampler 10 uL aliquots of samples or standards were injected onto a Waters dC18 guard column (3.5 μm, 2.1 × 20 mm) connected to a Waters Atlantis dC18 analytical column (3.5 μm, 2.1 × 100 mm) (Waters, Massachusetts, USA). The analytical column temperature was kept at 35°C and flow rate was 0.3 mL/min. The following elution profile was used: 0–4 min, linear gradient from 100% solvent A (0.05 M ammoniumformate, pH 3.0) to 100% solvent B (100% acetonitrile); 4–6 min 100% solvent B; 6–12 min 100% solvent A. Between 0–2.5 min and 6.13-12 min the solvent was sent to waste using a divert valve to avoid unnecessary introduction of solvents in the source. The retention time of SA and IS was 5 min.
The MS/MS was operated in the negative mode with a capillary voltage of 5.0 kV. The tube lens settings for SA and IS were 88 and 93 V respectively. As a drying gas nitrogen (sheath gas and auxiliary) was used at a flow rate of 50 and 30 L/min respectively, with a source temperature of 325°C. The collision cell was operated at 28 eV at a gas pressure of 1.4 mTorr Argon. Mass resolution of Q1 and Q3 quadrupoles was 0.7 Da. Detection was performed by selecting negatively single charged SA ions m/z 308.0 > 86.9 and IS m/z 311.0 > 89.9. Xcalibur software (Version 1.4, SP3, Thermo Finnigan, USA) was used for instrument control, data acquisition and data processing.

Method validation

Linearity was determined with nine different concentrations of FSA up to 1700 μmol/L and eight different concentrations of sialyllactose up to 1000 μmol/L. Hydrolysis of sialyllactose was performed as described for CSA in AFS (see above). Limit of detection (LOD, signal-to-noise ratio 3:1) and limit of quantitation (LOQ, signal-to-noise ratio 10:1) were determined using a 5 μmol/L SA standard, four AFS samples containing 1.2-12 μmol/L FSA and four fibroblast homogenates containing 0.7-4.9 μmol/L FSA. Recovery was evaluated by addition of 49 or 106 nmol FSA and 57 nmol sialyllactose to 500 μL AFS and 1.5 nmol FSA to 300 μL fibroblast homogenate. Precision (intra-assay and inter-assay variation) was assessed with two QC AFS samples containing 4.3 (normal) and 38.1 (high) μmol/L FSA and 194 and 274 μmol/L CSA respectively.

Results

Amniotic fluid supernatant

Calibration curves were linear (R2 0.999) up to at least 1700 μmol/L for FSA and 1000 μmol/L for TSA (sialyllactose). Limit of detection (LOD) was 0.13 μmol/L for FSA and 0.6 μmol/L for TSA. Limit of quantitation (LOQ) was 0.36 μmol/L for FSA and 1.9 μmol/L for TSA. Intra-assay variation coefficients in AFS were 8.5% for FSA and 8.9% for CSA. Inter-assay variation of FSA in two QC samples was 19.4% (FSA 4.3 μmol/L) and 12.4% (FSA 38.1 μmol/L). For CSA, inter-assay variation in these two QC samples was 14.2% (CSA 194 μmol/L) and 14.4% (CSA 274 μmol/L). Recovery was 85-94% for FSA and 82–86% for CSA (sialyllactose).
Reference values for FSA in AFS were 2.8 ± 1.8 μmol/L (average ± SD; range 0–8.2, n = 108) for gestational age 15–25 weeks and 6.8 ± 2.3 μmol/L (range 3.2-12.0, n = 43) for gestational age 26–38 weeks. While the AFS samples used to determine reference values were stored at −80°C, we tested whether storage at −20°C resulted in different FSA concentration, e.g. higher values due to release of CSA. FSA values in 11 AFS samples stored for 6 to 8 years at −20°C were all within the reference range determined with samples stored at −80°C. FSA concentration in AFS from five fetuses affected with ISSD ranged from 23.9 to 58.9 μmol/L and was clearly different from control values (Fig. 1). In six AFS samples from hydrops fetalis pregnancies with other cause, FSA values were within reference range (2.4-4.9 μmol/L, n = 4, gestational age 16–23 weeks; 7.0 and 11.2 μmol/L, n = 2, gestational age 30 and 33 weeks).
CSA was expressed as nmol/mg protein, since a positive correlation existed between the concentrations of protein and CSA. Reference values for CSA were 41 ± 16 nmol/mg protein (average ± SD; range 7–89, n = 103) for gestational age 15–25 weeks and 60 ± 20 nmol/mg protein (average ± SD; range 26–102, n = 24) for gestational age 26–38 weeks.

Fibroblasts

The limit of quantitation determined for FSA in fibroblast homogenates was 0.18 μmol/L. Recovery of FSA was 104%. Reference values for FSA in fibroblast homogenates were 1.0 ± 0.7 nmol/mg protein (average ± SD; range 0.3-2.2, n = 24). FSA measured in six fibroblast homogenates of patients known to be affected with ISSD was 20–154 nmol/mg protein with a median value of 31 nmol/mg protein. In two samples of patients with an intermediate form of SASD FSA was 12.9 and 15.1 nmol/mg protein, while in two samples of patients with Salla disease FSA was 5.9 and 7.4 nmol/mg protein.

Discussion

Sialic acid storage disease (SASD) may present with variable clinical severity. The most severe phenotype is hydrops fetalis (Froissart et al. 2005; Lefebvre et al. 1999). A number of other lysosomal storage disorders may also present as hydrops fetalis (Stone and Sidransky 1999) and diagnostic tests to investigate the cause of hydrops fetalis should include assays for these lysosomal disorders (Piraud et al. 1996; Kooper et al. 2006). To date HPLC has been the preferred method to measure FSA in AFS (Aula and Aula 2006). Other existing methods for determination of FSA in AFS such as the colorimetric Warren test or TLC have limited specificity or sensitivity or consist of elaborate procedures. The method described here combines high specificity and sensitivity with very simple sample preparation. FSA determination merely requires mixing of an AFS sample with a sialic acid stable isotope solution, immediately followed by LC-MS/MS. The whole procedure including sample preparation, analysis and calculation of results can be performed in 2–4 h. The reference values described here (0–6.3 μmol/L; 95 % confidence interval for gestational age 15–25 weeks) appear to be similar to previously published values determined by the thiobarbiturate assay (1.7-5.3 μmol/L; Aula and Aula 2006). FSA concentrations in AFS samples from five fetuses affected with ISSD (23.9 to 58.9 μmol/L) were 2- to 9-fold the upper limit of the corresponding reference values and demonstrate that this method is able to distinguish ISSD pregnancies from normal controls. Interestingly, our results suggest that FSA is stable for at least 8 years of storage at −20°C enabling retrospective diagnosis of ISSD. Our method may also be useful for prenatal diagnosis of ISSD in families with an ISSD index case with no additional molecular workup. Cases of Salla disease may only have mildly elevated FSA concentrations in AFS and in these instances the preferred method of prenatal diagnosis is mutation testing in a chorionic villus biopsy (Aula and Aula 2006).
In addition to measurement of FSA, we have performed analytical validation of CSA determination in AFS. Increased CSA in AFS has been reported in cases of sialidosis and galactosialidosis (Piraud et al. 1996; Kooper et al. 2006). Since sialidosis or galactosialidosis AFS samples were not available to us, we have not been able to establish the efficacy of our method in prenatal screening of these diseases.
Following demonstration of an elevated concentration of FSA in urine or AFS, confirmation of SASD is possible by quantification of FSA in cultured fibroblasts or amniocytes (Seppala et al. 1991; Renlund and Aula 1987). We show that our LC-MS/MS method is able to establish diagnosis of SASD in cultured fibroblasts. Reference values determined by LC-MS/MS (1.0 ± 0.7 nmol/mg protein) are fully compatible with previously reported values determined by the thiobarbiturate assay (1.0 ± 0.6 nmol/mg protein; Seppala et al. 1991) and fibroblasts of ISSD patients as well as Salla disease and SASD of intermediate severity contain elevated FSA levels compared to control fibroblasts. Moreover, the level of FSA correlated with the severity of disease. Sample preparation is simple and can be completed within an hour, which is much faster than HLPC or, in particular, the thiobarbituric assay which requires extensive sample clean-up by ion exchange chromatography. Our method may also be useful to screen for ISSD in CVS or amniocytes, but this needs to be validated.
In conclusion, this report describes simple quantitative procedures using LC-MS/MS to assay free and conjugated sialic acid in amniotic fluid supernatant as well as free sialic acid in cultured fibroblasts.

Open Access

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
Open AccessThis is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License (https://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by-nc/​2.​0), which permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

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Metadaten
Titel
Prenatal screening of sialic acid storage disease and confirmation in cultured fibroblasts by LC-MS/MS
verfasst von
Jeroen van den Bosch
Linda F. Oemardien
Malgorzata I. Srebniak
Monique Piraud
Jan G. M. Huijmans
Frans W. Verheijen
George J. G. Ruijter
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2011
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease / Ausgabe 5/2011
Print ISSN: 0141-8955
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-2665
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-011-9351-3

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