Trapped ion mobility spectrometry (TIMS) and parallel accumulation - serial fragmentation (PASEF) enable in-depth lipidomics from minimal sample amounts
2019
Lipids form a highly diverse group of biomolecules fulfilling central biological functions, ranging from structural components to intercellular signaling. Yet, a comprehensive characterization of the
lipidomefrom limited starting material, for example in tissue biopsies, remains very challenging. Here, we develop a high-sensitivity
lipidomicsworkflow based on
nanoflowliquid chromatography and trapped
ion mobility spectrometry. Taking advantage of the PASEF principle (Meier et al., PMID: 26538118), we fragmented on average nine precursors in each 100 ms TIMS scans, while maintaining the full mobility resolution of co-eluting isomers. The very high acquisition speed of about 100 Hz allowed us to obtain MS/MS spectra of the vast majority of detected isotope patterns for automated lipid identification. Analyzing 1 uL of human plasma, PASEF almost doubled the number of identified lipids over standard TIMS-MS/MS and allowed us to reduce the analysis time by a factor of three without loss of coverage. Our single-extraction workflow surpasses the plasma lipid coverage of extensive multi-step protocols in common lipid classes and achieves attomole sensitivity. Building on the high precision and accuracy of TIMS collisional cross section measurements (median CV 0.2%), we compiled 1,327 lipid CCS values from human plasma, mouse liver and human cancer cells. Our study establishes PASEF in lipid analysis and paves the way for sensitive, ion mobility-enhanced
lipidomicsin four dimensions.
Keywords:
-
Correction
-
Source
-
Cite
-
Save
49
References
3
Citations
NaN
KQI