Development of a Highly Sensitive, High-Throughput, Mass Spectrometry-Based Assay for Rat Procollagen Type-I N-Terminal Propeptide (PINP) To Measure Bone Formation Activity

Type-I procollagen aminoterminal propeptide (PINP) is a useful biomarker for bone formation activity that is used to monitor treatment of bone disorders including osteoporosis. Studies with human patients under long-term therapy for osteoporosis by daily injection of parathyroid hormone (PTH) demons...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of proteome research 2007-11, Vol.6 (11), p.4218-4229
Hauptverfasser: Han, Bomie, Copeland, Marci, Geiser, Andrew G, Hale, Laura V, Harvey, Anita, Ma, Yanfei L, Powers, Connie S, Sato, Masahiko, You, Jinsam, Hale, John E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Type-I procollagen aminoterminal propeptide (PINP) is a useful biomarker for bone formation activity that is used to monitor treatment of bone disorders including osteoporosis. Studies with human patients under long-term therapy for osteoporosis by daily injection of parathyroid hormone (PTH) demonstrated that the circulating level of PINP at 3 months of treatment, measured by radioimmunoassay, was a good predictor for bone mineral density (BMD) at 18 months. It is important to have PINP assays for other species to elucidate processes of bone formation and for the development of new therapeutic options that can enhance bone formation activity. Currently, only a human PINP radioimmunoassay is commercially available for clinical use, which may not be cross reactive with PINP from other species. For example, rat PINP has little amino acid sequence homology to human PINP. Therefore, we developed a new, highly sensitive, high-throughput mass spectrometry-based assay for PINP from rat plasma or serum that does not rely on antibody reagents. Circulating levels of PINP showed age-dependent changes in rats. Prednisolone treatment, which is known to retard bone formation activity, led to a significant decrease in PINP, whereas PTH treatment dose-dependently increased PINP. The throughput of the assay parallels that of most antibody-based assays so that it can handle a large number of samples that are generated from preclinical animal studies. PINP in rats may serve as a biomarker for bone formation activity, and this assay could be instrumental in studying bone physiology in rat experimental models. Keywords: biomarker • mass spectrometry • multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) • ion trap • proteomics • osteoporosis • PTH • PINP
ISSN:1535-3893
1535-3907
DOI:10.1021/pr070288s