Ion mobility mass spectrometry enhances low-abundance species detection in untargeted lipidomics

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Abstract

We describe a simple method for the detection of low intensity lipid signals in complex tissue samples, based on a combination of liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry and ion mobility mass spectrometry. The method relies on visual and software-assisted analysis of overlapped mobilograms (diagrams of mass-to-charge ratio, m/z, vs drift time, DT) and was successfully applied in untargeted lipidomics analyses of mouse brain tissue to detect relatively small variations in a scarce class of phospholipids (N-acyl phosphatidylethanolamines) generated during neural tissue damage, against a background of hundreds of lipid species. Standard analytical tools, including Principal Component Analysis, failed to detect such changes.

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Basit, A., Pontis, S., Piomelli, D., & Armirotti, A. (2016). Ion mobility mass spectrometry enhances low-abundance species detection in untargeted lipidomics. Metabolomics, 12(3). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11306-016-0971-3

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