Investigating the Potential Use of Chemical Biopsy Devices to Characterize Brain Tumor Lipidomes

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Abstract

The development of a fast and accurate intraoperative method that enables the differentiation and stratification of cancerous lesions is still a challenging problem in laboratory medicine. Therefore, it is important to find and optimize a simple and effective analytical method of enabling the selection of distinctive metabolites. This study aims to assess the usefulness of solid-phase microextraction (SPME) probes as a sampling method for the lipidomic analysis of brain tumors. To this end, SPME was applied to sample brain tumors immediately after excision, followed by lipidomic analysis via liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS). The results showed that long fibers were a good option for extracting analytes from an entire lesion to obtain an average lipidomic profile. Moreover, significant differences between tumors of different histological origin were observed. In-depth investigation of the glioma samples revealed that malignancy grade and isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) mutation status impact the lipidomic composition of the tumor, whereas 1p/19q co-deletion did not appear to alter the lipid profile. This first on-site lipidomic analysis of intact tumors proved that chemical biopsy with SPME is a promising tool for the simple and fast extraction of lipid markers in neurooncology.

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Bogusiewicz, J., Kupcewicz, B., Goryńska, P. Z., Jaroch, K., Goryński, K., Birski, M., … Bojko, B. (2022). Investigating the Potential Use of Chemical Biopsy Devices to Characterize Brain Tumor Lipidomes. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23073518

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