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      Sphingolipidomics: high-throughput, structure-specific, and quantitative analysis of sphingolipids by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry.

      Methods (San Diego, Calif.)
      Animals, Chromatography, Liquid, methods, Glycosphingolipids, chemistry, Humans, Lipids, Mass Spectrometry, Models, Chemical, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization, Sphingolipids, Sphingomyelins, Sphingosine, analogs & derivatives, Time Factors

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          Abstract

          Sphingolipids are a highly diverse category of compounds that serve not only as components of biologic structures but also as regulators of numerous cell functions. Because so many of the sphingolipids in a biological system are bioactive and are often closely related structurally and metabolically (for example, complex sphingolipids<-->ceramide<-->sphingosine<-->sphingosine 1-phosphate), to understand the role(s) of sphingolipids in a given context one must conduct a "sphingolipidomic" analysis-i.e., a structure-specific and quantitative measurement of all of these compounds, or at least all members of a critical subset. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC MS/MS) is currently the only technology with the requisite structural specificity, sensitivity, quantitative precision, and relatively high-throughput capabilities for such analyses in small samples ( approximately 10(6) cells). This review describes a series of protocols that have been developed for the relatively rapid analysis of all of the molecular species from 3-ketosphinganines through sphingomyelins and some glycosphingolipids (including all the compounds that are presently regarded as sphingolipid "second messengers") using normal- and reverse-phase LC to separate isometric and isobaric species (such as glucosylceramides and galactosylceramides) in combination with triple quadrupole (for MS/MS) and hybrid quadrupole-ion trap (for MS3) mass spectrometry. Also discussed are some of the issues remaining to be resolved in the analysis of the full sphingolipidome.

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