Chem. J. Chinese Universities ›› 2001, Vol. 22 ›› Issue (1): 52.

• Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Newborn Screening of Phenylketonuria by GC-CI-MS-SIM

DENG Chun-Hui1, HU Yao-Ming1, HU Ke-Ji1, ZHANG Ya-Fen2, GU Xue-Fan2   

  1. 1. Analysis Measurement Center, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China;
    2. Xinhua Hosiptal, Shanghai 200082, China
  • Received:2000-06-12 Online:2001-01-24 Published:2001-01-24

Abstract: The application of MSin newborn screening is one of the most important branches of MS's current clinical application. In this paper we first reported a new method of newborn screening for Phenylketonuria (PKU) by GC-CI-MS-SIM, which was relatively cheap, fast, sensitive and accurate. In this method Phenylalanine (Phe) and Tyrosine (Tyr) were extracted from dry blood spots with 0.1% mol/L HCl-methanol. The protein in the extraction was gotten rid of by centrifugor. Phe and Tyr were reacted with 30 mol/L HCl-butanol, then the products Phe and Tyr butyl esters were reacted with trifluoroacetic anhydride. The final derivations from Phe and Tyr, alanine, 3-phenyl-N-(trifluoroacetyl)-, butyl este and L-tyrosine, N(trifluoroacetyl)-, butyl ester, trifl were analyzed by GC-CI-MS-SIM. The contents of the two amino acids in blood samples were determined by calculating the areas of their final derivations with exterior standard. Finally, the molar ratios of Phe to Tyr in blood sample were calculated as the basis of PKUdiagnosis. Because chemical ionization and selective ion measurement were used in this method, the limits of detection for Phe and Tyr were low and the sensitivity was excellent. About 30 blood samples were analyzed by this method, and the results prove that this method could successfully discriminate between normal infants and PKUpositive ones. The price of instrument GC-MSis cheaper than that of MS-MS. Therefore it was capable for large-scale screening in developing countries.

Key words: Phenylketonuria, Amino acid, GC-CI-MS-SIM, Screening, Derivatization

CLC Number: 

TrendMD: