May 15, 2018
Journal Article

Moving beyond the van Krevelen diagram: A new stoichiometric approach for compound classification in organisms

Abstract

van Krevelen diagrams (O:C vs H:C ratios of elemental formulas) have been widely used in studies to obtain an estimation of the main compound categories present in environmental samples. However, the limits defining a specific compound category based solely on O:C and H:C ratios of elemental formulas have never been accurately listed or proposed to classify metabolites in biological samples. Furthermore, while O:C vs. H:C ratios of elemental formulas can provide an overview of the compound categories, such classification is inefficient because of the large overlap among different compound categories along both axes. We propose a more accurate compound classification for biological samples analyzed by high-resolution mass spectrometry-based on an assessment of the C:H:O:N:P stoichiometric ratios of over 130,000 elemental formulas of compounds classified in 6 main categories: lipids, peptides, amino-sugars, carbohydrates, nucleotides and phytochemical compounds (oxy-aromatic compounds). Our multidimensional stoichiometric compound classification (MSCC) constraints showed a highly accurate categorization of elemental formulas to the main compound categories in biological samples with over 98% of accuracy representing a substantial improvement over any classification based on the classic van Krevelen diagram. This method represents a significant step forward in environmental research, especially ecological stoichiometry and eco-metabolomics studies, by providing a novel and robust tool to further our understanding the ecosystem structure and function through the chemical characterization of different biological samples.

Revised: December 21, 2020 | Published: May 15, 2018

Citation

Rivas-Ubach A., Y. Liu, T.S. Bianchi, N. Tolic, G.C. Jansson, and L. Pasa Tolic. 2018. Moving beyond the van Krevelen diagram: A new stoichiometric approach for compound classification in organisms. Analytical Chemistry 90, no. 10:6152-6160. PNNL-SA-134250. doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.8b00529