Literature DB >> 11734568

Molecular species composition of rat liver phospholipids by ESI-MS/MS: the effect of chromatography.

C J DeLong1, P R Baker, M Samuel, Z Cui, M J Thomas.   

Abstract

Using electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS) this study shows that the loss of glycerophospholipid (GPL) after chromatography was unevenly distributed across the GPL molecular species. Both TLC and HPLC caused a preferential loss of GPL with 0 to 3 double bonds: 20% and 7.2% for choline glycerophosphates (PC) and 19.7% and 7.5% for ethanolamine glycerophosphates (PE), respectively. A consequence of these losses was that GPLs containing fatty acids with four or more double bonds had a greater contribution to the total after chromatography. ESI-MS/MS analysis also showed that PC molecular species with four or more double bonds migrated at the front of the TLC band of PCs. GPLs extracted from TLC plates occasionally contained PCs that were smaller than those in the original extract. These low molecular mass PCs were easily reduced to alcohols and formed derivatives with 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine, suggesting that aldehydes were generated by the oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids. Directly analyzing lipid extracts by ESI-MS/MS without preliminary chromatographic separation gives an accurate distribution of GPL molecular species in lipid mixtures. However, the ionization of the phospholipids in the electrospray jet maximized at relatively low concentrations of GPL. There was a linear response between phospholipid mass and ion intensity for concentrations around 1-2 nmol/ml for both PC and PE. The total ion intensity continued to increase with concentrations above 1-2 nmol/ml, but the response was non-linear.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11734568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lipid Res        ISSN: 0022-2275            Impact factor:   5.922


  26 in total

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Journal:  J Lipid Res       Date:  2005-04-16       Impact factor: 5.922

5.  A comparison of five lipid extraction solvent systems for lipidomic studies of human LDL.

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8.  A shotgun lipidomics approach in Sinorhizobium meliloti as a tool in functional genomics.

Authors:  Libia Saborido Basconcillo; Rahat Zaheer; Turlough M Finan; Brian E McCarry
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9.  Automated lipid identification and quantification by multidimensional mass spectrometry-based shotgun lipidomics.

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