Ritchie Ly, Lucas Torres, Nicholas Ly, and Philip Britz-McKibbin (2023)
Expanding Lipidomic Coverage in Multisegment Injection-Nonaqueous Capillary Electrophoresis-Mass Spectrometry via a Convenient and Quantitative Methylation Strategy
Analytical Chemistry, 95:17513-17524.
Orthogonal separation techniques coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (MS) are required for characterization of the human lipidome given its inherent chemical and structural complexity. However, electrophoretic separations remain largely unrecognized in contemporary lipidomics research as compared to various chromatographic and ion mobility methods. Herein, we introduce a novel derivatization protocol based on 3-methyl-1-p-tolyltriazene (MTT) as a safer alternative to diazomethane for quantitative phospholipid (PL) methylation (~ 90%), which enables their rapid analysis by multisegment injection-nonaqueous capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry (MSI-NACE-MS). Isobaric interferences and ion suppression effects were minimized by performing an initial reaction using 9-fluorenylmethyoxycarbonyl chloride prior to MTT with a subsequent back extraction in hexane. This charge-switch derivatization strategy expands lipidome coverage when using MSI-NACE-MS under positive ion mode with improved resolution, greater sensitivity and higher throughput (~ 3.5 min/sample), notably for zwitter-ionic PLs that are analyzed as their cationic phosphate methyl esters. Our method was validated by analyzing methyl-tert-butyl ether extracts of reference human plasma, which allowed for a direct comparison of 48 phosphatidylcholine and 27 sphingomyelin species previously reported in an inter-laboratory lipidomics harmonization study. The potential for plasma PL quantification by MSI-NACE-MS via a serial dilution of NIST SRM-1950 was also demonstrated based on estimation of relative response factors using their reported consensus concentrations from a lipidomics harmonization study. Also, lipid identification was supported by modeling characteristic changes in the electrophoretic mobility for cationic PLs in conjunction with MS/MS. Overall, this work offers a practical derivatization protocol to expand lipidome coverage in CE-MS beyond the analysis of hydrophilic/polar metabolites under aqueous buffer conditions, which may also prove useful in shotgun and LC-MS lipidomic applications.
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