The effect of freeze/thaw cycles on reproducibility of metabolic profiling of Marine microalgal extracts using direct infusion high-resolution mass spectrometry (HR-MS)

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Abstract

During normal sample preparation, storage in freezers and subsequent freeze/thaw cycles are commonly introduced. The effect of freeze/thaw cycles on the metabolic profiling of microalgal extracts using HR-MS was investigated. Methanolic extracts of monocultures of Arctic marine diatoms were analyzed immediately after extraction, after seven days of storage at -78 °C (one freeze/thaw cycle), and after additional seven days at -20 °C (two freeze/thaw cycles). Repeated direct infusion high-resolution mass spectrometry analysis of microalgae extracts of the same sample showed that reproducibility was ca. 90% when a fresh (unfrozen) sample was analyzed. The overall reproducibility decreased further by ca. 10% after the first freeze/thaw-cycle, and after one more freeze/thaw cycle the reproducibility decreased further by ca. 7%. The decrease in reproducibility after freeze-thaw cycles could be attributed to sample degradation and not to instrument variability.

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Chr. Eilertsen, H., Huseby, S., Degerlund, M., Eriksen, G. K., Ingebrigtsen, R. A., & Hansen, E. (2014). The effect of freeze/thaw cycles on reproducibility of metabolic profiling of Marine microalgal extracts using direct infusion high-resolution mass spectrometry (HR-MS). Molecules, 19(10), 16373–16380. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules191016373

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