4.3 Article

Rapid Quantitative Analysis of Sphingolipids in Seafood Using HPLC with Evaporative Light-Scattering Detection: Its Application in Tissue Distribution of Sphingolipids in Fish

Journal

JOURNAL OF OLEO SCIENCE
Volume 59, Issue 9, Pages 509-513

Publisher

JAPAN OIL CHEMISTS SOC
DOI: 10.5650/jos.59.509

Keywords

sphingolipids; sphingomyelin; glucosylceramide; HPLC-ELSD; fish

Funding

  1. Program for Promotion of Basic and Applied Researches for Innovations in Bio-oriented Industry (BRAIN)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Sphingolipids are ubiquitous in all eukaryotic organisms and known to be essential constituents of cellular membranes. Recently, various physiological functions of dietary sphingolipids, such as preventing cancer, improving skin barrier and contributing to central nervous system myelination have been demonstrated. To characterize the sphingolipids from fish as food components, tissue distribution of sphingomyelin and glycosylceramide (ceramide monohexoside, CMH) in fish were determined in this study. We established a rapid, accurate and effective method for separation, purification and determination of sphingolipids by using high-performance liquid chromatography with evaporative light-scattering detector (ELSD-HPLC). Sphingolipids were extracted and quantified from pacific saury (Cololabis saira). Sphingomyelin in different tissues of Cololabis saira ranged from 2.5 +/- 0.2 mg/g to 27.6 +/- 2.1 mg/g, the content in brain was the highest, followed by eyes, and CMH contents were less than 23.0 +/- 2.4 mg/g in all tissues. These results revealed that fish contained CMH and sphingomyelin as same levels as most of the terrestrial organisms and suggested marine organisms could be used as a potential source of precious and useful complex lipids.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available