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The importance of accurately correcting for the natural abundance of stable isotopes.

Citation
Midani, F. S., et al. “The Importance Of Accurately Correcting For The Natural Abundance Of Stable Isotopes.”. Analytical Biochemistry, pp. 27-43.
Center University of Michigan
Author Firas S Midani, Michelle L Wynn, Santiago Schnell
Keywords Metabolic flux analysis, Natural abundance correction, Reproducibility, stable isotopes
Abstract

The use of isotopically labeled tracer substrates is an experimental approach for measuring in vivo and in vitro intracellular metabolic dynamics. Stable isotopes that alter the mass but not the chemical behavior of a molecule are commonly used in isotope tracer studies. Because stable isotopes of some atoms naturally occur at non-negligible abundances, it is important to account for the natural abundance of these isotopes when analyzing data from isotope labeling experiments. Specifically, a distinction must be made between isotopes introduced experimentally via an isotopically labeled tracer and the isotopes naturally present at the start of an experiment. In this tutorial review, we explain the underlying theory of natural abundance correction of stable isotopes, a concept not always understood by metabolic researchers. We also provide a comparison of distinct methods for performing this correction and discuss natural abundance correction in the context of steady state C metabolic flux, a method increasingly used to infer intracellular metabolic flux from isotope experiments.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Analytical biochemistry
Volume
520
Number of Pages
27-43
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1096-0309
DOI
10.1016/j.ab.2016.12.011
Alternate Journal
Anal. Biochem.
PMID
27989585
PMCID
PMC5343595
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