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Journal of Lipid Research
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    • JLR Methods
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    • Research Article10

    Author

    • Allen, Serena1
    • Ando, Tadasuke1
    • Balasubramanian, Harikrushnan1
    • Bateman, Kevin P1
    • Britz-McKibbin, Philip1
    • Cheng, Jing-Ru1
    • Chi, Zhang1
    • Cho, Wonhwa1
    • Choong, Karen1
    • Chow, Lisa S1
    • Crawford, Peter A1
    • Davies, Sean S1
    • Doran, Amanda C1
    • Dutter, Brendan1
    • Ekroos, Kim1
    • Fiedler, Maria1
    • Fries, Eric1
    • Gonen, Ayelet1
    • Gupta, Anjali1
    • Hatcher, Nathan G1
    • Helmeczi, Erick1
    • Hughey, Curtis C1
    • Itoh, Hiroki1
    • Kandebo, Monika1
    • Kedia, Komal1

    Journal

    • Journal of Lipid Research10

    Keyword

    • coefficient of variation3
    • CV3
    • internal standard3
    • IS3
    • LLOQ3
    • lower limit of quantification3
    • HILIC2
    • retention time2
    • RT2
    • 1,1'-dioctadecyl-3,3,3',3'-tetramethylindocarbocyanine perchlorate1
    • 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine1
    • 1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine1
    • 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoserine1
    • 13C18-Oleic acid1
    • 13C4-β-hydroxybutyrate1
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    • 17-hydroxyprogesterone1
    • 17-OHP1
    • 2-nitrosopyridine1
    • 2-NO-Pyr1
    • 2-propanol1
    • 25-hydroxyvitamin D1
    • 25OH-D1
    • 4α-hydroxycholesterol1
    • 4α-OHC1

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    JLR Methods

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    • Methods
      Open Access

      Development and validation of an isoform-independent monoclonal antibody–based ELISA for measurement of lipoprotein(a)

      Journal of Lipid Research
      Vol. 63Issue 8100239Published online: June 7, 2022
      • Santica M. Marcovina
      • Nazanin Navabi
      • Serena Allen
      • Ayelet Gonen
      • Joseph L. Witztum
      • Sotirios Tsimikas
      Cited in Scopus: 2
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        The study aims were to develop a new isoform-independent enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) for the measurement of lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], validate its performance characteristics, and demonstrate its accuracy by comparison with the gold-standard ELISA method and an LC-MS/MS candidate reference method, both developed at the University of Washington. The principle of the new assay is the capture of Lp(a) with monoclonal antibody LPA4 primarily directed to an epitope in apolipoprotein(a) KIV2 and its detection with monoclonal antibody LPA-KIV9 directed to a single antigenic site present on KIV9.
        Development and validation of an isoform-independent monoclonal antibody–based ELISA for measurement of lipoprotein(a)
      • Methods
        Open Access

        Heptanol-mediated phase separation determines phase preference of molecules in live cell membranes

        Journal of Lipid Research
        Vol. 63Issue 6100220Published online: April 28, 2022
        • Anjali Gupta
        • Danqin Lu
        • Harikrushnan Balasubramanian
        • Zhang Chi
        • Thorsten Wohland
        Cited in Scopus: 1
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          The localization of many membrane proteins within cholesterol- and sphingolipid-containing microdomains is essential for proper cell signaling and function. These membrane domains, however, are too small and dynamic to be recorded, even with modern super-resolution techniques. Therefore, the association of membrane proteins with these domains can only be detected with biochemical assays that destroy the integrity of cells require pooling of many cells and take a long time to perform. Here, we present a simple membrane fluidizer–induced clustering approach to identify the phase-preference of membrane-associated molecules in individual live cells within 10–15 min.
          Heptanol-mediated phase separation determines phase preference of molecules in live cell membranes
        • Methods
          Open Access

          Validation of a multiplexed and targeted lipidomics assay for accurate quantification of lipidomes

          Journal of Lipid Research
          Vol. 63Issue 6100218Published online: April 27, 2022
          • Nanyan Rena Zhang
          • Nathan G. Hatcher
          • Kim Ekroos
          • Komal Kedia
          • Monika Kandebo
          • Jacob N. Marcus
          • and others
          Cited in Scopus: 1
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            A major challenge of lipidomics is to determine and quantify the precise content of complex lipidomes to the exact lipid molecular species. Often, multiple methods are needed to achieve sufficient lipidomic coverage to make these determinations. Multiplexed targeted assays offer a practical alternative to enable quantitative lipidomics amenable to quality control standards within a scalable platform. Herein, we developed a multiplexed normal phase liquid chromatography-hydrophilic interaction chromatography multiple reaction monitoring method that quantifies lipid molecular species across over 20 lipid classes spanning wide polarities in a single 20-min run.
            Validation of a multiplexed and targeted lipidomics assay for accurate quantification of lipidomes
          • Methods
            Open Access

            A high-throughput platform for the rapid screening of vitamin D status by direct infusion-MS/MS

            Journal of Lipid Research
            Vol. 63Issue 5100204Published online: March 22, 2022
            • Erick Helmeczi
            • Eric Fries
            • Lauren Perry
            • Karen Choong
            • Katie O’Hearn
            • Dayre McNally
            • and others
            Cited in Scopus: 0
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              Vitamin D is an important fat-soluble prohormone with pleiotropic effects on human health, such as immunomodulation of the innate and adaptive immune system. There is an unmet clinical need for a rapid screening platform for 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OH-D) determination without chromatographic separation that offers better precision and accuracy than immunoassays. Here, we introduce a high-throughput method for assessing vitamin D status from blood specimens based on direct infusion-MS/MS (DI-MS/MS) following click derivatization using 2-nitrosopyridine.
              A high-throughput platform for the rapid screening of vitamin D status by direct infusion-MS/MS
            • Methods
              Open Access

              Artifactual FA dimers mimic FAHFA signals in untargeted metabolomics pipelines

              Journal of Lipid Research
              Vol. 63Issue 5100201Published online: March 18, 2022
              • Alisa B. Nelson
              • Lisa S. Chow
              • Curtis C. Hughey
              • Peter A. Crawford
              • Patrycja Puchalska
              Cited in Scopus: 2
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                FA esters of hydroxy FAs (FAHFAs) are lipokines with extensive structural and regional isomeric diversity that impact multiple physiological functions, including insulin sensitivity and glucose homeostasis. Because of their low molar abundance, FAHFAs are typically quantified using highly sensitive LC-MS/MS methods. Numerous relevant MS databases house in silico-spectra that allow identification and speciation of FAHFAs. These provisional chemical feature assignments provide a useful starting point but could lead to misidentification.
                Artifactual FA dimers mimic FAHFA signals in untargeted metabolomics pipelines
              • Methods
                Open Access

                Development of oxaalkyne and alkyne fatty acids as novel tracers to study fatty acid beta-oxidation pathways and intermediates

                Journal of Lipid Research
                Vol. 63Issue 4100188Published online: March 2, 2022
                • Lars Kuerschner
                • Philipp Leyendecker
                • Kristina Klizaite
                • Maria Fiedler
                • Jennifer Saam
                • Christoph Thiele
                Cited in Scopus: 1
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                  Fatty acid beta-oxidation is a key process in mammalian lipid catabolism. Disturbance of this process results in severe clinical symptoms, including dysfunction of the liver, a major beta-oxidizing tissue. For a thorough understanding of this process, a comprehensive analysis of involved fatty acid and acyl-carnitine intermediates is desired, but capable methods are lacking. Here, we introduce oxaalkyne and alkyne fatty acids as novel tracers to study the beta-oxidation of long- and medium-chain fatty acids in liver lysates and primary hepatocytes.
                  Development of oxaalkyne and alkyne fatty acids as novel tracers to study fatty acid beta-oxidation pathways and intermediates
                • Methods
                  Open Access

                  Sensitive UHPLC-MS/MS quantification method for 4β- and 4α-hydroxycholesterol in plasma for accurate CYP3A phenotyping

                  Journal of Lipid Research
                  Vol. 63Issue 3100184Published online: February 15, 2022
                  • Yosuke Suzuki
                  • Ayako Oda
                  • Jun Negami
                  • Daiki Toyama
                  • Ryota Tanaka
                  • Hiroyuki Ono
                  • and others
                  Cited in Scopus: 0
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                    4β-Hydroxycholesterol (4β-OHC) is formed by Cytochrome P450 (CYP)3A and has drawn attention as an endogenous phenotyping probe for CYP3A activity. However, 4β-OHC is also increased by cholesterol autooxidation occurring in vitro due to dysregulated storage and in vivo by oxidative stress or inflammation, independent of CYP3A activity. 4α-hydroxycholesterol (4α-OHC), a stereoisomer of 4β-OHC, is also formed via autooxidation of cholesterol, not by CYP3A, and thus may have clinical potential in reflecting the state of cholesterol autooxidation.
                    Sensitive UHPLC-MS/MS quantification method for 4β- and 4α-hydroxycholesterol in plasma for accurate CYP3A phenotyping
                  • Methods
                    Open Access

                    Development of a novel spatiotemporal depletion system for cellular cholesterol

                    Journal of Lipid Research
                    Vol. 63Issue 3100178Published online: February 7, 2022
                    • Ha Pham
                    • Indira Singaram
                    • Jiachen Sun
                    • Arthur Ralko
                    • Madalyn Puckett
                    • Ashutosh Sharma
                    • and others
                    Cited in Scopus: 0
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                      Cholesterol is an essential component of mammalian cell membranes whose subcellular concentration and function are tightly regulated by de novo biosynthesis, transport, and storage. Although recent reports have suggested diverse functions of cellular cholesterol in different subcellular membranes, systematic investigation of its site-specific roles has been hampered by the lack of a methodology for spatiotemporal manipulation of cellular cholesterol levels. Here, we report the development of a new cholesterol depletion system that allows for spatiotemporal manipulation of intracellular cholesterol levels.
                      Development of a novel spatiotemporal depletion system for cellular cholesterol
                    • Methods
                      Open Access

                      Cold-induced phase separation for the simple and reliable extraction of sex hormones for subsequent LC-MS/MS analysis

                      Journal of Lipid Research
                      Vol. 63Issue 1100158Published online: December 1, 2021
                      • Rui Peng
                      • Juan Le
                      • Shu-Lin Yang
                      • Jing-Ru Cheng
                      • Yan Li
                      • Shao-Ting Wang
                      Cited in Scopus: 3
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                        Sex hormones, including androgens, estrogens, and progestogens, are important biomarkers for various diseases. Quantification of sex hormones is typically conducted by LC-MS/MS. At present, most methods require liquid-liquid extraction or solid phase extraction for sample preparation. However, these pretreatments are prone to compromise LC-MS/MS throughput. To improve on the current standard practices, we investigated cold-induced phase separation for sex hormone extraction. After protein precipitation with acetonitrile and adjusting the solution constitution with water, samples were stored at −30°C for 10 min to generate two distinct phases: an acetonitrile-rich layer on top of a water-rich layer.
                        Cold-induced phase separation for the simple and reliable extraction of sex hormones for subsequent LC-MS/MS analysis
                      • Methods
                        Open Access

                        Selective measurement of NAPE-PLD activity via a PLA1/2-resistant fluorogenic N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamine analog

                        Journal of Lipid Research
                        Vol. 63Issue 1100156Published online: November 25, 2021
                        • Jonah E. Zarrow
                        • Jianhua Tian
                        • Brendan Dutter
                        • Kwangho Kim
                        • Amanda C. Doran
                        • Gary A. Sulikowski
                        • and others
                        Cited in Scopus: 1
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                          N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (NAPE)-hydrolyzing phospholipase D (NAPE-PLD) is a zinc metallohydrolase enzyme that converts NAPEs to bioactive N-acyl-ethanolamides. Altered NAPE-PLD activity may contribute to pathogenesis of obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, and neurological diseases. Selective measurement of NAPE-PLD activity is challenging, however, because of alternative phospholipase pathways for NAPE hydrolysis. Previous methods to measure NAPE-PLD activity involved addition of exogenous NAPE followed by TLC or LC/MS/MS, which are time and resource intensive.
                          Selective measurement of NAPE-PLD activity via a PLA1/2-resistant fluorogenic N-acyl-phosphatidylethanolamine analog
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