Abstract
Background
Deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme galactosylcerebrosidase (GALC) causes Krabbe disease. The diagnosis for Krabbe disease includes measurement of GALC enzymatic activity by radioisotope assay or accumulation of metabolite psychosine. To improve current diagnostic workflow and assay performance, we developed and validated a leukocyte enzymatic assay by using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) for lysosomal storage diseases.
Methods
Leukocytes were separated and extracted from whole blood samples, and total protein was quantitated by BCA method. Commercialized and multiplexed substrates, internal standards, and buffer were incubated with cell lysates. The lysosomal enzymes in leukocytes metabolized the artificial substrate into product which is structurally identical to the internal standard. Liquid-liquid extraction was performed and supernatant was dried down and reconstituted. Liquid chromatography separation was achieved by Waters CSH C18, 2.1 x 50 mm column and Acquity UPLC system. A Waters Xevo TQS tandem mass spectrometer was used for mass detection.
Results
Enzymatic reaction products for six lysosomal enzymes were chromatographically resolved from substrate breakdown products through 3.5 minutes gradient liquid chromatography. Intra-assay imprecision was determined by 11 replicates of samples containing low and high concentration (CV<15%). Carryover was determined by assaying triplicates of cell lysate-free cocktails directly after injection of high enzyme activity sample (less than 0.1%). No matrix effect was found. The GALC enzyme activity was calculated and standardized by corresponding product and internal standard ratios from 5-point standard curve. The range of enzyme activity from three, known affected patients is 0.01–0.07 (nmol/hr/mg protein); whereas, two identified carriers had enzyme activate in the range of 0.14–0.40 (nmol/hr/mg protein). The reference interval was established from 63 residual, unaffected samples and was 0.12–5.97 (1.44±1.44) nmol/hr/mg protein.
Conclusions
A simple and multiplexed LC-MS/MS assay was developed which can measure small amounts of residual GALC enzyme activity in leukocytes. This confirmatory assay will aid in the diagnosis and prognosis (i.e. differentiate disease severity) of Krabbe disease and other lysosomal storage disorders.