Rapid lipidomics analysis for sepsis-induced liver injury in rats and insights into lipid metabolic pathways using ultra-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry

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Abstract

Lipidomics has been applied in the identification and quantification of molecular lipids within an organism, and to provide insights into mechanisms in clinical medicine. Sepsis is a major systemic inflammatory syndrome and the liver here is a potential target organ for dysfunctional response. However, the study of alterations in global lipid profiles associated with sepsis-induced liver injury is still limited. In this work, we set out to determine alterations of lipidomics profiles in a rat model of sepsis-induced liver injury using an untargeted lipidomics strategy. Liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry in conjunction with multivariate data analysis and pathway analysis were used to acquire a global lipid metabolite profile. Meanwhile, biochemistry index and histopathological examinations of the liver were performed to obtain auxiliary measurements for determining the pathological changes associated with sepsis-induced liver injury. Eleven lipid metabolites and two metabolic pathways were discovered and associated with sepsis-induced liver injury. The results indicated that various biomarkers and pathways may provide evidence for and insight into lipid profile alterations associated with sepsis-induced liver injury, and hence pointed to potential strategic targets for clinical diagnosis and therapy in the future.

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Liang, Q., Liu, H., Li, X. L., Yang, Y., & Hairong, P. (2019). Rapid lipidomics analysis for sepsis-induced liver injury in rats and insights into lipid metabolic pathways using ultra-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. RSC Advances, 9(61), 35364–35371. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9ra05836b

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