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Quantitative determination of esterified eicosanoids and related oxygenated metabolites after base hydrolysis.

Citation
Quehenberger, O., et al. “Quantitative Determination Of Esterified Eicosanoids And Related Oxygenated Metabolites After Base Hydrolysis.”. Journal Of Lipid Research, pp. 2436-2445.
Center UCSD-UCLA
Author Oswald Quehenberger, Signe Dahlberg-Wright, Jiang Jiang, Aaron M Armando, Edward A Dennis
Keywords lipidomics, Mass spectrometry, oxidized lipids, oxylipins
Abstract

Eicosanoids and related metabolites (oxylipins) possess potent signaling properties, elicit numerous important physiologic responses, and serve as biomarkers of disease. In addition to their presence in free form, a considerable portion of these bioactive lipids is esterified to complex lipids in cell membranes and plasma lipoproteins. We developed a rapid and sensitive method for the analysis of esterified oxylipins using alkaline hydrolysis to release them followed by ultra-performance LC coupled with mass spectrometric analysis. Detailed evaluation of the data revealed that several oxylipins are susceptible to alkaline-induced degradation. Nevertheless, of the 136 metabolites we examined, 56 were reproducibly recovered after alkaline hydrolysis. We classified those metabolites that were resistant to alkaline-induced degradation and applied this methodology to quantify metabolite levels in a macrophage cell model and in plasma of healthy subjects. After alkaline hydrolysis of lipids, 34 metabolites could be detected and quantified in resting and activated macrophages, and 38 metabolites were recovered from human plasma at levels that were substantially greater than in free form. By carefully selecting internal standards and taking the observed experimental limitations into account, we established a robust method that can be reliably employed for the measurement of esterified oxylipins in biological samples.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of lipid research
Volume
59
Issue
12
Number of Pages
2436-2445
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1539-7262
DOI
10.1194/jlr.D089516
Alternate Journal
J. Lipid Res.
PMID
30323111
PMCID
PMC6277157
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