Advanced lipidomic techniques for high-throughput profiling of complex sphingolipids in plant tissues

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Abstract

Sphingolipids are essential membrane components that regulate various cellular functions by forming ordered domains. The structural core of sphingolipid comprises a long-chain sphingoid base and its N-acylated ceramide, modified with diverse head groups to form complex sphingolipids. In plants, sphingolipid structures exhibit unique structural diversity in both the ceramide moiety and head group. The complicated sphingolipid structures suggest unique functions, but complicate lipidomic studies. A new methodology was established for simple sample preparation and targeted mass spectrometry, to advance high-throughput techniques for plant sphingolipidomics, in this study. Total sphingolipids were prepared using a single-tube preparation procedure ensuring improved recovery of all sphingolipid classes through user-friendly and easy handling. Over 900 molecular species from a theoretical plant sphingolipidome library were separated via reverse-phase liquid chromatography and quantified in a single run using scheduled monitoring of targeted mass spectrometry. This method enables largescale profiling of the natural distribution of sphingolipids across diverse plant materials.

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