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1.
J Chromatogr A ; 1220: 26-34, 2012 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22169191

ABSTRACT

A hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HILIC) - ion trap mass spectrometry method was developed for separation of a wide range of phospholipids. A diol column which is often used with normal phase chromatography was adapted to separate different phospholipid classes in HILIC mode using a mobile phase system consisting of acetonitrile, water, ammonium formate and formic acid. An efficient between-class separation of seven phospholipid classes including phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylinostol, phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylserine, sphingomyelin and lysophosphatidylcholine was successfully achieved within 14 min using a gradient elution which starts with 90% of organic solvent and ends with 70% of organic solvent. 53 mM formic acid (in both organic phase and aqueous phase) and 60mM ammonium formate (only in aqueous phase) were used as mobile phase modifier. The relatively high amount of ammonium formate was essential to obtain well-shaped peaks of each phospholipid class, especially phosphatidylserines; actually, no negative effect due to ammonium formate was observed for electrospray-mass spectrometry detection in real-life samples. Good chromatographic separation between different lipid classes was obtained (Rs, from 0.73 to 4.97) and well-shaped peaks (tailing factor, from 0.98 to 1.20) were obtained. The developed method was fully validated and the satisfactory performance characteristics such as linearity (R(2), 0.990-0.999), retention time stability (RSD<1%), within day repeatability (RSD, 5-13%), between day variation (RSD, 7-14%) and recoveries (99.6-115.5%) indicated the gradient HILIC method was appropriate for profiling of plasma phospholipids. The method was successfully applied to separate phospholipids extracts from human plasma, mouse plasma and rat plasma.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Liquid/instrumentation , Phosphatidic Acids/isolation & purification , Sphingomyelins/isolation & purification , Alcohols/chemistry , Animals , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Least-Squares Analysis , Linear Models , Mice , Phosphatidic Acids/blood , Phosphatidic Acids/classification , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reproducibility of Results , Sphingomyelins/blood , Sphingomyelins/classification
2.
J Microbiol Methods ; 53(3): 295-307, 2003 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12689707

ABSTRACT

We report the use of a surface analysis approach, static secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) equipped with a molecular (ReO(4)(-)) ion primary beam, to analyze the surface of intact microbial cells. SIMS spectra of 28 microorganisms were compared to fatty acid profiles determined by gas chromatographic analysis of transesterfied fatty acids extracted from the same organisms. The results indicate that surface bombardment using the molecular primary beam cleaved the ester linkage characteristic of bacteria at the glycerophosphate backbone of the phospholipid components of the cell membrane. This cleavage enables direct detection of the fatty acid conjugate base of intact microorganisms by static SIMS. The limit of detection for this approach is approximately 10(7) bacterial cells/cm(2). Multivariate statistical methods were applied in a graded approach to the SIMS microbial data. The results showed that the full data set could initially be statistically grouped based upon major differences in biochemical composition of the cell wall. The gram-positive bacteria were further statistically analyzed, followed by final analysis of a specific bacterial genus that was successfully grouped by species. Additionally, the use of SIMS to detect microbes on mineral surfaces is demonstrated by an analysis of Shewanella oneidensis on crushed hematite. The results of this study provide evidence for the potential of static SIMS to rapidly detect bacterial species based on ion fragments originating from cell membrane lipids directly from sample surfaces.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/chemistry , Fatty Acids/analysis , Spectrometry, Mass, Secondary Ion/methods , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Fatty Acids/classification , Fatty Acids/isolation & purification , Models, Molecular , Phosphatidic Acids/analysis , Phosphatidic Acids/classification
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