NCSU Baker Lab - Smoke Inhalation and SRM 1950

Development and Application of Multidimensional Lipid Libraries to Investigate Lipidomic Dysregulation Related to Smoke Inhalation Injury Severity
  • Organism: Homo sapiens
  • Instrument: 6560 Q-TOF LC/MS
  • SpikeIn: No
  • Keywords: lipidomics, ion mobility
  • Lab head: Erin Baker Submitter: Kaylie Kirkwood
Abstract
Lipids play many biological roles including membrane formation, protection, insulation, energy storage, and cell division. These functions have brought great interest to lipidomic studies for understanding their dysregulation in toxic exposure, inflammation, and diseases. However, lipids have shown to be analytically challenging due to their highly isomeric nature and vast concentration ranges in biological matrices. Therefore, powerful multidimensional techniques such as those integrating liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry, collision induced dissociation, and mass spectrometry (LC-IMS-CID-MS) have recently been implemented to separate lipid isomers as well as provide structural information and increased feature identification confidence. These multidimensional datasets are however extremely large and highly complex, resulting in challenges in data processing and annotation. Here, we have overcome these challenges by developing sample-specific multidimensional libraries using the freely available software Skyline. Specifically, the human plasma library developed for this work contains over 500 unique, experimentally validated lipids, which is combined with adapted Skyline functions for highly confident lipid annotations such as indexed retention time (iRT) for retention time prediction and IMS drift time filtering for increased sensitivity and selectivity. For broad comparison with other lipidomic studies, this human plasma database was initially used to annotate LC-IMS-CID-MS data from a NIST SRM 1950 extract, giving comparable results to previous studies. This workflow was then utilized to assess matched plasma and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) samples from patients with varying degrees of smoke inhalation injury to identify potential lipid-based patient prognostic and diagnostic markers.
Experiment Description
LC-IMS-CID-MS data was collected from lipid extracts of NIST SRM 1950, human plasma, and human BALF samples.
Sample Description
NIST SRM 1950 samples are commercially available pooled plasma samples spiked with human metabolites. The plasma and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) samples were collected from patients with severe smoke inhalation injuries.
Created on 10/8/21, 5:17 PM
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Smoke_Inhalation_BALF_(+)_2021-10-08_12-49-38.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:36:551101521881,18523
Smoke_Inhalation_BALF_(-)_2021-10-08_12-47-55.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:36:471302422722,22025
Smoke_Inhalation_Plasma_(+)_2021-10-08_12-45-31.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:36:331101832271,38922
Smoke_Inhalation_Plasma_(-)_2021-10-08_12-42-24.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:36:241402843352,81822
Plasma_Lipid_Library_(-)_NIST_SRM_2021-10-08_12-22-12.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:35:571503043713,1323
Plasma_Lipid_Library_(+)_NIST_SRM_2021-10-08_12-21-23.sky.zip2021-10-08 17:35:461303134462,7983