Development of an Isotope Dilution Assay for Precise Determination of Insulin, C-peptide, and Proinsulin Levels in Non-diabetic and Type II Diabetic Individuals with Comparison to Immunoassay
We describe the application of a stable isotope dilution assay (IDA) to determine precise insulin, C-peptide, and proinsulin levels in blood by extraction from serum and quantitation by mass spectrometry using analogues of each target protein labeled with stable isotopes. Insulin and C-peptide level...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 1997-05, Vol.272 (19), p.12513-12522 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We describe the application of a stable isotope dilution assay (IDA) to determine precise insulin, C-peptide, and proinsulin
levels in blood by extraction from serum and quantitation by mass spectrometry using analogues of each target protein labeled
with stable isotopes. Insulin and C-peptide levels were also determined by immunoassay, which gave consistently higher results
than by IDA, the relative difference being larger at low concentrations. Insulin, C-peptide, and proinsulin levels were all
shown by IDA to be higher in type II diabetics than in non-diabetics, with mean values rising from 22 (± 2) to 92 (± 8), 335
(± 11) to 821 (± 24), and 6 (± 1) to 37 (± 3) p m , respectively. Interestingly, the ratio between IDA and immunoassay values for insulin levels increased from 1.3 in non-diabetics
to 1.7 in type II diabetics. The ratio between proinsulin and insulin levels by IDA increased from 0.24 in non-diabetics to
0.36 in type II diabetics, whereas the ratio between C-peptide and insulin levels by IDA decreased from 17.6 to 10.7. This
disproportionate change in protein levels between different types of individuals has implications for the metabolism of insulin
in the diabetics studied (type II) and suggests that C-peptide levels are not always a reliable guide as to pancreatic insulin
secretion. In addition, levels of the 33-residue C-peptide (partially trimmed form) were shown to be less than 10% that of
the fully trimmed 31-residue C-peptide levels, and we tested IDA in a clinical context by two post-pancreatic graft studies.
IDA was shown to give direct, positive identification of the target protein with unrivaled accuracy, avoiding many of the
problems associated with present methodology for protein determination. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.272.19.12513 |