4 research outputs found
Shotgun Lipidomics Approach to Stabilize the Regiospecificity of Monoglycerides Using a Facile Low-Temperature Derivatization Enabling Their Definitive Identification and Quantitation
Monoglycerides play a central role
in lipid metabolism and are
important signaling metabolites. Quantitative analysis of monoglyceride
molecular species has remained challenging due to rapid isomerization
via α-hydroxy acyl migration. Herein, we describe a shotgun
lipidomics approach that utilizes a single-phase methyl <i>tert</i>-butyl ether extraction to minimize acyl migration, a facile low
temperature diacetyl derivatization to stabilize regiospecificity,
and tandem mass spectrometric analysis to identify and quantify regioisomers
of monoglycerides in biological samples. The rapid and robust diacetyl
derivatization at low temperatures (e.g., −20 °C, 30 min)
prevents postextraction acyl migration and preserves regiospecificity
of monoglyceride structural isomers. Furthermore, ionization of ammonium
adducts of diacetyl monoglyceride derivatives in positive-ion mode
markedly increases analytic sensitivity (low fmol/μL). Critically,
diacetyl derivatization enables the differentiation of discrete monoglyceride
regioisomers without chromatography through their distinct signature
fragmentation patterns during collision induced dissociation. The
application of this approach in the analysis of monoglycerides in
multiple biologic tissues demonstrated diverse profiles of molecular
species. Remarkably, the regiospecificity of individual monoglyceride
molecular species is also diverse from tissue to tissue. Collectively,
this developed approach enables the profiling, identification and
quantitation of monoglyceride regioisomers directly from tissue extracts