For research use only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.
This application note describes a high-throughput quantitative and comprehensive HILIC method for the analysis of polar and non-polar lipid classes in plasma.
Traditionally, lipids are associated with cellular roles involving energy storage and used as structural building blocks. Recent developments in biomedical lipid research using mass spectrometric approaches have identified the important role of lipids in a variety of different disease states including cancer, inflammation, and cardiovascular diseases which has generated a resurgence in lipid research.1
The extreme structural diversity of lipids in real biological samples is challenging for analytical techniques due to large differences in physiocchemical properties (such as acidity, basicity, neutral, polar, and non-polar) of individual lipid species. Currently, the two main analytical strategies used for lipidomics are direct infusion Mass Spectrometry (MS) and high performance reversed phase (RP) LC-MS/MS. Direct infusion MS provides high-throughput analysis but suffers from the inability to separate and resolve isobaric species and to identify low abundant species due to ion suppression. RP-LC is widely used for the separation of individual lipid molecular species based on their lipophilicity; a characteristic governed by the carbon chain length and number of double bonds. Separation by lipophilicity, however, often results in the co-elution of lipid species from different classes.2 Normal-phase methods, using solvents such as hexane and chloroform, are also used for the separation of lipid classes but their lengthy elution, limited analyte solubility, and lack of solvent compatibility with mass spectrometer detection makes the technique less attractive.
Hydrophilic interaction chromatography (HILIC) is a type of normal-phase chromatography that can be used for the separation of lipid classes with a reversed phase solvent system to overcome these potential challenges.3 The lipid class separation using HILIC is more convenient for LC-MS quantitation because lipid class stable isotope labelled (SIL) standards coelute with lipid species inside particular lipid classes under identical mobile phase and matrix composition. This provides identical ionization conditions for the SIL standards and determined lipid class.(2,4) An additional benefit of separating lipid species by class is that fewer SIL standards are required for quantification and leads to a significant cost savings over including SIL standards for each lipid of interest. This application note describes a comprehensive and high-throughput HILIC-based analytical method for the separation and quantitation of both polar and non-polar lipid classes (Figure 1).
Pooled healthy control plasma was spiked with SIL standards, (SPLASH LIPIDOMIX, Avanti Lipids, Alabaster, AL) at nine concentration levels to generate calibration curves for quantification. Table 1 shows the list of SIL standards spiked into the NIST Standard Reference Material 1950 plasma (Sigma Aldrich, Poole, UK) extract and other calibration parameters in positive and negative ion mode.
Six replicates of the NIST Standard Reference Material 1950 plasma were also spiked with 5% SIL prior to extraction.
A simple sample preparation procedure was adopted using protein precipitation with a pre-cooled isopropanol (IPA) at 4 °C (1:5, plasma:IPA).5 Samples were vortex mixed for 1 minute and placed at -20 °C for 10 minutes. Samples were vortex mixed again for 1 minute and placed at 4 °C for 2 hours to ensure complete protein precipitation. The extracted samples were centrifuged at a maximum of 10,300 g for 10 minutes at 4 °C before transferring the supernatant to glass vials for LC-MS analysis.
LC system: |
ACQUITY UPLC H-Class PLUS |
Detector: |
ACQUITY UPLC PDA and ACQUITY QDa |
LC system: |
ACQUITY I-Class UPLC, Fixed Loop or Flow through Needle (FTN) |
Column(s): |
ACQUITY UPLC BEH Amide 1.7 μm, 2.1 × 100 mm |
Column temp.: |
45 °C |
Flow rate: |
0.6 mL/min |
Mobile phase A: |
95:5 Acetonitrile/water + 10 mM ammonium acetate |
Mobile phase B: |
50:50 Acetonitrile/water + 10 mM ammonium acetate |
Gradient: |
0.1% to 20.0% B for 2 minutes, then 20% to 80% B for 3 minutes followed by 3 minutes re-equilibration |
Run time: |
8 minutes |
Injection volume: |
1 μL |
LC system: |
ACQUITY UPLC H-Class PLUS |
Detector: |
ACQUITY UPLC PDA and ACQUITY QDa |
MS systems: |
Xevo TQ-XS or Xevo TQ-S |
Ionization mode: |
ESI (+/-) |
Capillary voltage: |
2.8 kV (+)/1.9 kV (-) |
Acquisition mode: |
MRM |
Source temp.: |
120 °C |
Desolvation temp.: |
500 °C |
Cone gas flow: |
150 L/hr |
Desolvation flow: |
1000 L/hr |
Nebulizer gas: |
7 bar |
Ion guide offset 1: |
3 V |
Ion Guide offset 2: |
0.3 V |
A LipidQuan Quanpedia method file (version 1.4) that contains the LC conditions, MS method, and associated TargetLynx processing method (including retention times) was generated. The resulting data were processed with either TargetLynx or Skyline (MacCoss Lab Software, University of Washington).
Lipidomics involves the analysis of large scale sample sets and a high-throughput method is required. A rapid and comprehensive LC-MS/MS method was developed for the analysis of polar and non-polar lipid classes in human plasma employing a HILIC-based lipid class separation and MRM MS quantitation in both positive and negative ion mode. Table 1 shows the list of SIL standards spiked into the NIST 1950 plasma extract and the calibration parameters in positive and negative ion mode. Table 2 shows the different lipid classes measured with their corresponding MRM retention time window, acquisition mode used, and the total Quanpedia MRM transitions. The LipidQuan Quanpedia database for this method contains 2041 MRM transition lipid species from 16 polar and non-polar lipid classes. A mixture of SIL lipid standards representing different lipid classes from Avanti (SPLASH LIPIDOMIX) were used to demonstrate the separation of the lipid classes. As shown in Figure 2, lipids are mainly separated into lipid classes according to their polarity within 8 minutes yielding a quantitative method suitable for the lipidomic analysis of large sample sets. Retention time increases with the increase in lipid polarity.
The development of a LipidQuan Quanpedia method file allows for the simple download of all the MRM transitions and chromatographic conditions representing the different lipid classes with a total of 2041 MRM transitions, therefore eliminating manual input of LC-MS methods and reducing method development training costs and possible transcription errors.
The developed method was used for the quantitative analysis of lipid species in NIST Standard Reference Material 1950 plasma samples using SIL standards for each lipid class. Known concentration SIL standards were added to the NIST plasma sample before extraction. Figures 3 and 4 show representative chromatogram HILIC lipid class separation in positive and negative ion modes, respectively. A total of 508 lipid species are identified and quantified from the NIST plasma (261 positive mode injection and 247 negative mode injection). The platform can also be used for more in-depth targeting of a specific class of lipids of interest. Table 1 shows calibration parameters of SIL standards spiked into the NIST plasma extract using positive and negative ion mode. Calibration curves were constructed for each SIL standards and are linear within tested calibration ranges with average correlation coefficients of greater than 0.992 (positive mode) and 0.980 (negative mode). Representative calibration curves for SIL standards 15:0/18:1(d7) PC in positive ion mode with 0.993 correlation coefficient and 15:0/18:1(d7) PG in negative ion mode with 0.984 correlation coefficient are shown in Figures 5A and 5B respectively.
720006402, September 2018