| Literature DB >> 35028570 |
Yinghua Song1, Changyun Cai1, Yingzi Song1, Xue Sun1, Baoxiu Liu1, Peng Xue1, Mingxia Zhu1, Wenqiong Chai1, Yonghui Wang1, Changfa Wang1, Mengmeng Li1.
Abstract
Lipids are one of the major macronutrients essential for adequate growth and maintenance of human health. Their structure is not only complex but also diverse, which makes systematic and holistic analyses challenging; consequently, little is known regarding the relationship between phenotype and mechanism of action. In recent years, rapid advancements have been made in the fields of lipidomics and bioinformatics. In comparison with traditional approaches, mass spectrometry-based lipidomics can rapidly identify as well as quantify >1,000 lipid species at the same time, facilitating comprehensive, robust analyses of lipids in tissues, cells, and body fluids. Accordingly, lipidomics is now being widely applied in various fields, particularly food and nutrition science. In this review, we discuss lipid classification, extraction techniques, and detection and analysis using lipidomics. We also cover how lipidomics is being used to assess food obtained from livestock and poultry. The information included herein should serve as a reference to determine how to characterize lipids in animal food samples, enhancing our understanding of the application of lipidomics in the field in animal husbandry. © Korean Society for Food Science of Animal Resources.Entities:
Keywords: animal food; lipidomics; lipids; mass spectrometry
Year: 2022 PMID: 35028570 PMCID: PMC8728500 DOI: 10.5851/kosfa.2021.e59
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Sci Anim Resour ISSN: 2636-0772
Lipid categories of the comprehensive classification system
| Category | Abbreviation | Number | Common structures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fatty acyls | FA | 9918 |
|
| Glycerolipids | GL | 7656 |
|
| Glycerophospholipids | GP | 9957 |
|
| Sphingolipids | SP | 4854 |
|
| Sterol lipids | ST | 2985 |
|
| Prenol lipids | PR | 1485 |
|
| Saccharolipids | SL | 1326 |
|
| Polyketides | PK | 6863 |
|
The number in the LIPID MAPS database (Lipid structure, annotation, classification and pathways, analytical methods. http://www.lipidmaps.org.CC-BY).
Fig. 1.A strategy of MS-based lipidomics.
(a) Pretreatment (lipid extraction) from food samples is commonly used by liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) and solid phase extraction (SPE) methods, LLE mainly includes Folch, Bligh-Dyer, and Matyash methods. (b) Liquid chromatography (LC) or gas chromatography (GC) is usually employed for separating different types of lipids and then combined with mass spectrometry (MS) identification, LC/GC-MS are the main detection methods used in lipidomics. (c) Data analysis requires the application of chemometric tools, specific software and databases, including univariate (multiple analysis, t-test, and analysis of variance), multivariate analyses (principal component analysis and hierarchical cluster analysis). Differential lipid molecules and biomarkers can be comprehensively screened and identified, of which were used for constructing lipid metabolic networks. GC-MS, gas chromatography-MS.
Common software and databases used in lipidomics
| Name | Description | Website or references |
|---|---|---|
| LIMSA | Data analysis based on MS/MS spectra |
|
| METLIN | Data analysis based on MS/MS spectra |
|
| MZmine | LC-MS data analysis workflow |
|
| Lipid View | Analysis based on electrospray MS data. |
|
| LipidXplorer | Data analysis based on MS and MS/MS spectra |
|
| LipidSearch | Automatically identify and relatively quantify LC-MS data |
|
| LIPID MAPS | Lipid structure, annotation, classification and pathways, analytical methods |
|
| Lipid Bank | Lipid structure, name, spectra and literature information |
|
| Lipid Library | Lipid chemical, biological and analytical |
|
| LipidBlast | In silico tandem MS database for lipid identification |
|
| CyberLipids | Lipid structure and analytical methods |
|
| KEGG | Synthesis and degradation of fatty acid, metabolic pathways of lipid |
|
| Metlin | MS/MS database |
|
MS, mass spectrometry; LC-MS, liquid chromatography-MS; LIPID MAPS, Lipid Metabolites and Pathways Strategy.
Application of lipidomics to assess food from farm animals
| Sample | Technology | Lipid | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meat | |||
| Pork (Luchuan and Duroc pigs) | UPLC-ESI-MS/MS | 605 lipids, 23 categories, 211 TG, 95 PC, 66 PE, 46 DG, and 37 Car, Luchuan pigs have higher IMF, including more TG and DG | ( |
| Pork (Tibetan, Jilin and Sanmenxia black pigs) | UPLC-ESI-MS/MS | 1,180 lipid species, Tibetan pork showed higher 14 GL, 8 GP, 2 SL, 2 FA, and 2 PR, Jilin pork showed higher 4 GL, 4 GP, 3 ST, 3 PK, 2 FA, and 2 PR | ( |
| Pork (Beijing Heiliu and Laiwu Chinese black, Duroc) | UPLC-Q-Exactive Orbitrap/MS | 757 lipids, black pork had more TG and less LPC, 55 potential markers | ( |
| Pork (slaughter weight) | UPLC-Q-Exactive Orbitrap/MS | 592 lipids, 19 lipid classes, IMF and TG increased, PC and PE decreased with increasing slaughter weight | ( |
| Black-boned silky fowl (different ages and genders) | UPLC-ESI-Q-TOF/MS | 1,127 lipids, 8 categories, GL and GP, 47 potential markers | ( |
| Donkey meat (different parts) | LC-MS | 1,143 lipids and 14 subclasses, 73 differential lipids | ( |
| Beef (different origins) | LC-ESI-Q-TOF/MS | Forty potential markers: GL, FA, PIs, PEs, LPEs, LPCs, Cer and SMs | ( |
| Sheep meat (cold chain storage) | UHPLC-Q-Orbitrap MS/MS | Forty-eight changed lipids: 8 FAC, 23 PCs, 3 LPCs, 13 PEs, and 1 LPE | ( |
| Egg | |||
| Chicken egg | UPLC-Q-TOF MS/MS | 1,633 lipid species, 43.78% GP, 25.66% GL, 16.66% FA, 6.86% SP, 4.10% ST, 1.53% PK, 1.10% PR, and 0.31% SL | ( |
| Egg yolks (duck, hen, and quail) | UPLC-Q-TOF MS | 57 molecular species of phospholipids | ( |
| Chicken egg yolks | High-resolution MS | Glycerophosphocholines and glycerophosphoethanolamines | ( |
| Chicken egg yolks | LC-ESI-Q-TOF MS | 618 lipid species, Tibetan and docosahexaenoic acid egg showed higher phospholipid and lower TG | ( |
| Chicken egg (male and female ) | LC-ESI-Q-TOF MS | 900 lipid species, sex discrimination: acylcarnitine, TG (12:0/22:1/22:3), hemolytic serine (16:0/0:0), Cer (d18:0/18:0), cholesterol (16:1), and PC (18:3/20:4) | ( |
| Chicken egg (different diets and environments) | HILIC-LC-MS/MS or UPLC-Q-TOF MS | GL and GP | ( |
| Milk | |||
| Donkey and cow milk (different lactation stages) | UHPLC-Q-TOF MS | 335 lipids, 13 subclasses, including CL, PA, PC, PE, PG, PI, PS, Cer, SMs, HexCer, Hex2Cers, DG, and TG | ( |
| Goat milk (different geographical origins and lactation stages) | UPLC-Q-Exactive Orbitrap MS | 56 lipid species, 14 subclasses, including 5 CL, 45 Cer, 17 LPCs, 4 LPEs, 36 PCs, 80 PEs, 9 PGs, 22 PIs, 2 acyl carnitine species, 55 HexCer, 56 SMs, 17 FA, 15 DG, and 416 TG | ( |
| Human, bovine, and caprine milk | UHPLC-Q-TOF MS | 13 lipid classes, including TG, DG, SM, PC, Cer, HexCer, Hex2Cer, PE, PG, PS, PI, PA, and CL | ( |
| Donkey, human, and cow milk | UHPLC-Q-Exactive Orbitrap MS | 11 subclasses and 475 lipids, including 380 TG, 13 DG, 67 GP, 14 SP, and 1 wax exter | ( |
| Bovine milk with vegetable oils or fats | Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-Q-TOF MS | 20 TG classes with high speed and reliability | ( |
| Goat, soy, and bovine milk | UPLC-Q-Exactive Orbitrap MS | Goat milk was rich in medium-chain TG,
USFA, and | ( |
| Cow milk (heat stress of cow) | UHPLC-Q-TOF MS | Heat stress increased long-chain fatty acids; moreover, reduced PE, PS, PC, LPC and glucoceramide, potential markers: LPC | ( |
UPLC, ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography; ESI, electrospray ionization; MS, mass spectrometry; IMF, intramuscular fat; LPCs, lysophosphatidylcholines; Q-TOF, quadrupole-time-of-flight; LC-MS, liquid chromatography-MS; LPEs, lysophosphatidylethanolamines; FAC, FA carnitines.