4.7 Article

Rapid quantification of fatty acids in plant oils and biological samples by LC-MS

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 413, Issue 21, Pages 5439-5451

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-021-03525-y

Keywords

Chromatographic separation; Pseudo-SRM; Non-esterified fatty acids; Saponification; Oxylipins

Funding

  1. PhD fellowship of the Ev
  2. Studienwerk Villigst e.V.

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This study developed a rapid and sensitive LC-MS method for quantification of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids, demonstrating high accuracy and precision in analysis. The method was successfully applied on human plasma and edible oils, showing potential for gaining new insights in the composition of biological samples.
Analysis of fatty acids (FA) in food and biological samples such as blood is indispensable in modern life sciences. We developed a rapid, sensitive and comprehensive method for the quantification of 41 saturated and unsaturated fatty acids by means of LC-MS. Optimized chromatographic separation of isobaric analytes was carried out on a C8 reversed phase analytical column (100 x 2.1 mm, 2.6 mu m core-shell particle) with a total run time of 15 min with back pressure lower than 300 bar. On an old triple quadrupole instrument (3200, AB Sciex), pseudo selected reaction monitoring mode was used for quantification of the poorly fragmenting FA, yielding limits of detection of 5-100 nM. Sample preparation was carried out by removal of phospholipids and triglycerides by solid-phase extraction (non-esterified fatty acids in oils) or saponification in iso-propanol (fatty acyls). This is not only a rapid strategy for quantification of fatty acyls, but allows the direct combination with the LC-MS-based analysis of fatty acid oxidation products (eicosanoids and other oxylipins) from the same sample. The concentrations of fatty acyls determined by means of LC-MS were consistent with those from GC-FID analysis demonstrating the accuracy of the developed method. Moreover, the method shows high precisions with a low intra-day (<= 10% for almost all fatty acids in plasma and <= 15% in oils) and inter-day as well as inter-operator variability (< 20%). The method was successfully applied on human plasma and edible oils. The possibility to quantify non-esterified fatty acids in samples containing an excess of triacylglycerols and phospholipids is a major strength of the described approach allowing to gain new insights in the composition of biological samples.

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