Quantification of the anti-neoplastic polyacetylene falcarinol from carrots in human serum by LC-MS/MS

Ulla Jakobsen, Morten Kobæk-Larsen, Karoline D Kjøller, Steen Antonsen, Gunnar Baatrup, Morten B Trelle, Ulla Jakobsen, Morten Kobæk-Larsen, Karoline D Kjøller, Steen Antonsen, Gunnar Baatrup, Morten B Trelle

Abstract

Falcarinol is a polyacetylene which is found in carrots and known to have anti-neoplastic properties in rodents. Research in the bioactivity of falcarinol in humans require methods for quantification of falcarinol in human serum. Here we report the development of an LC-MS/MS method and its use to measure serum falcarinol concentrations in humans following intake of a carrot product. Falcarinol was measured by LC-MS/MS using the m/z 268 to m/z 182 mass transition. Six calibrator levels (0.2-20 ng/mL) and 3 control levels (0.4, 2 and 8 ng/mL) were prepared by addition of falcarinol to human serum pools. Linearity of the developed method was good with a mean R2 of 0.9942. Within-day, between-day and total coefficients of variation were 6.9-13.1%, 4.1-5.0% and 8.1-14.0%, respectively. The limits of detection and quantitation were 0.1 and 0.2 ng/mL, respectively, matrix effects 84.2%, recovery 101.4-105.4% and carry-over -0.24-0.07%. Serum falcarinol concentrations were measured in 18 healthy volunteers prior to and at 9 time-points following intake of a carrot product. Falcarinol concentrations peaked at the 1-hour time-point after intake in 15 out of 18 volunteers and declined according to a single exponential decay function with an aggregate t½ of 1.5 h. In conclusion, an LC-MS/MS method for quantification of falcarinol in human serum with acceptable performance was developed and used to measure falcarinol concentrations following intake of a carrot product.

Keywords: Antineoplastic; Falcarinol; Gastrointestinal cancer; LC/MS-MS; Mass spectrometry; Polyacetylenes.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Source: PubMed

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