March 31, 2018
Journal Article

Evaluating lipid mediator structural complexity using ion mobility spectrometry combined with mass spectrometry

Abstract

Lipid mediators (LMs) are broadly defined as a class of bioactive lipophilic molecules that regulate cell-to-cell communication events with many having a strong correlation with various human diseases and conditions. LMs are usually analyzed with liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry (LC-MS), but their numerous isomers greatly complicate the measurements with essentially identical fragmentation spectra and LC separations not always sufficient for distinguishing the features. In this work, we characterized LMs having specific categories using ion mobility spectrometry coupled with mass spectrometry (IMS-MS). The IMS collision cross sections and MS m/z values displayed distinct trends for each LM category studied. LC-IMS-MS analyses on flu infected mouse tissue samples also illustrated the presence of additional LM species not in our databases.

Revised: July 16, 2020 | Published: March 31, 2018

Citation

Kyle J.E., N.A. Aly, X. Zheng, K.E. Burnum-Johnson, R.D. Smith, and E.M. Baker. 2018. Evaluating lipid mediator structural complexity using ion mobility spectrometry combined with mass spectrometry. Bioanalysis 10, no. 5:279-289. PNNL-SA-130733. doi:10.4155/bio-2017-0245