Skip to Content
Merck
CN
  • Stable isotope dilution analysis of isovalerylglycine in amniotic fluid and urine and its application for the prenatal diagnosis of isovaleric acidemia.

Stable isotope dilution analysis of isovalerylglycine in amniotic fluid and urine and its application for the prenatal diagnosis of isovaleric acidemia.

Pediatric research (1986-03-01)
D G Hine, A M Hack, S I Goodman, K Tanaka
ABSTRACT

A stable isotope dilution method was developed to measure accurately small amounts of isovalerylglycine in amniotic fluid and urine for the prenatal diagnosis of isovaleric acidemia. [4,4,4-D3]Isovalerylglycine was synthesized and used as an internal standard. Samples were extracted, methylated, and analyzed by chemical ionization gas chromatography-mass spectrometry operated in the selected ion monitoring mode. This method is very sensitive (lower limit approximately 5 ng/ml), linear over three orders of magnitude above 10 ng/ml up to at least 10 micrograms/ml and reproducible. No isovalerylglycine was detected at all in amniotic fluids from eleven normal pregnant women with an exception of a single case which contained 6 ng/ml. Amniotic fluids from five pregnancies at risk were analyzed. Two of these samples had isovalerylglycine concentrations of 957 and 556 ng/ml. Three others contained 18, 18, and 17 ng/ml of isovalerylglycine. Postpartum diagnostic tests and/or in vitro assay of isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase of [1-14C] isovaleric acid oxidation using amniocytes confirmed that the first two fetuses were affected by isovaleric acidemia, whereas the latter three were unaffected. The method described in this report provides a highly accurate and reliable technique for the prenatal diagnosis of isovaleric acidemia.