Metabolite extraction from adherently growing mammalian cells for metabolomics studies: optimization of harvesting and extraction protocols

Dettmer, K; Nürnberger, N; Kaspar, H; Gruber, MA; Almstetter, MF; Oefner, PJ

HERO ID

1054638

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2011

Language

English

PMID

21125262

HERO ID 1054638
In Press No
Year 2011
Title Metabolite extraction from adherently growing mammalian cells for metabolomics studies: optimization of harvesting and extraction protocols
Authors Dettmer, K; Nürnberger, N; Kaspar, H; Gruber, MA; Almstetter, MF; Oefner, PJ
Journal Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
Volume 399
Issue 3
Page Numbers 1127-1139
Abstract Trypsin/ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) treatment and cell scraping in a buffer solution were compared for harvesting adherently growing mammalian SW480 cells for metabolomics studies. In addition, direct scraping with a solvent was tested. Trypsinated and scraped cell pellets were extracted using seven different extraction protocols including pure methanol, methanol/water, pure acetone, acetone/water, methanol/chloroform/water, methanol/isopropanol/water, and acid-base methanol. The extracts were analyzed by GC-MS after methoximation/silylation and derivatization with propyl chloroformate, respectively. The metabolic fingerprints were compared and 25 selected metabolites including amino acids and intermediates of energy metabolism were quantitatively determined. Moreover, the influence of freeze/thaw cycles, ultrasonication and homogenization using ceramic beads on extraction yield was tested. Pure acetone yielded the lowest extraction efficiency while methanol, methanol/water, methanol/isopropanol/water, and acid-base methanol recovered similar metabolite amounts with good reproducibility. Based on overall performance, methanol/water was chosen as a suitable extraction solvent. Repeated freeze/thaw cycles, ultrasonication and homogenization did not improve overall metabolite yield of the methanol/water extraction. Trypsin/EDTA treatment caused substantial metabolite leakage proving it inadequate for metabolomics studies. Gentle scraping of the cells in a buffer solution and subsequent extraction with methanol/water resulted on average in a sevenfold lower recovery of quantified metabolites compared with direct scraping using methanol/water, making the latter one the method of choice to harvest and extract metabolites from adherently growing mammalian SW480 cells.
Doi 10.1007/s00216-010-4425-x
Pmid 21125262
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science 000286599100013
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Metabolomics; GC-MS; Adherent cells; Detachment; Extraction; Amino acids
Is Qa No