MetaboQuan-R for Free Fatty Acids in Human Serum: A Rapid, Targeted UPLC-MS/MS Method for Metabolomic Research Studies
Applications | 2018 | WatersInstrumentation
Free fatty acids are fundamental components of metabolism, serving as key energy sources and building blocks for membrane lipids. Accurate profiling of these molecules in biological fluids such as human serum is crucial for understanding metabolic states and disease biomarkers. Traditional analyses often require derivatization and lengthy chromatographic runs, limiting throughput and applicability in large-scale metabolomic investigations.
This study presents a targeted UPLC-MS/MS method capable of semi-quantitatively analyzing 26 free fatty acids in human serum. The primary goals were to eliminate derivatization steps, shorten analysis time, and integrate the workflow into a flexible multi-omics platform suitable for high-throughput research applications.
Sample preparation involved protein precipitation of 100 µL serum with methanol, centrifugation, dilution of supernatant, and direct injection of 2 µL into the UPLC-MS/MS system. Chromatographic separation was performed on a CORTECS T3 column at 60 °C using a water/formic acid and isopropanol–acetonitrile/formic acid gradient, achieving 50–98 % organic elution within 1.2 minutes plus a column wash and re-equilibration. MS detection employed negative electrospray ionization with multiple reaction monitoring transitions for each fatty acid.
The method achieved baseline separation of all 26 free fatty acids in under three minutes. Chromatograms demonstrated clear peak resolution, including positional isomers of C20:3 and C22:5 appearing as dual peaks. Retention times ranged from 0.26 to 0.96 minutes, and optimized cone voltages and collision energies ensured sensitive and reproducible detection. The workflow supported rapid throughput with minimal sample handling and no derivatization.
Ongoing developments may include expansion of analyte panels to cover more lipid classes, integration with ion mobility for enhanced isomer resolution, and automation for clinical and epidemiological studies. Coupling this rapid method with real-time data processing and standardization protocols will further advance large-scale metabolomic profiling and biomarker discovery.
A generic UPLC-MS/MS platform was successfully adapted to deliver a fast, robust, and derivatization-free method for semi-quantitative analysis of 26 free fatty acids in human serum. The approach offers high throughput, streamlined sample preparation, and compatibility with a multi-omics research framework, promoting efficient biomarker research and metabolic studies.
Software, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesMetabolomics, Clinical Research
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Free fatty acids are fundamental components of metabolism, serving as key energy sources and building blocks for membrane lipids. Accurate profiling of these molecules in biological fluids such as human serum is crucial for understanding metabolic states and disease biomarkers. Traditional analyses often require derivatization and lengthy chromatographic runs, limiting throughput and applicability in large-scale metabolomic investigations.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study presents a targeted UPLC-MS/MS method capable of semi-quantitatively analyzing 26 free fatty acids in human serum. The primary goals were to eliminate derivatization steps, shorten analysis time, and integrate the workflow into a flexible multi-omics platform suitable for high-throughput research applications.
Methodology
Sample preparation involved protein precipitation of 100 µL serum with methanol, centrifugation, dilution of supernatant, and direct injection of 2 µL into the UPLC-MS/MS system. Chromatographic separation was performed on a CORTECS T3 column at 60 °C using a water/formic acid and isopropanol–acetonitrile/formic acid gradient, achieving 50–98 % organic elution within 1.2 minutes plus a column wash and re-equilibration. MS detection employed negative electrospray ionization with multiple reaction monitoring transitions for each fatty acid.
Instrumentation
- ACQUITY UPLC I-Class System
- CORTECS UPLC T3 Column (2.1 × 30 mm, 2.7 µm)
- Xevo TQ-S micro Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer
- MassLynx Software with Quanpedia for method management
- TargetLynx for data processing
- MetaboQuan-R method package
Results and Discussion
The method achieved baseline separation of all 26 free fatty acids in under three minutes. Chromatograms demonstrated clear peak resolution, including positional isomers of C20:3 and C22:5 appearing as dual peaks. Retention times ranged from 0.26 to 0.96 minutes, and optimized cone voltages and collision energies ensured sensitive and reproducible detection. The workflow supported rapid throughput with minimal sample handling and no derivatization.
Practical Benefits and Applications
- Simultaneous quantification of a broad panel of free fatty acids in a single rapid run
- High sample throughput suitable for large cohort studies
- Simplified workflow without chemical derivatization
- Versatility to integrate with other targeted metabolomic, lipidomic, and proteomic assays
- Scalability for multi-omics research platforms
Future Trends and Applications
Ongoing developments may include expansion of analyte panels to cover more lipid classes, integration with ion mobility for enhanced isomer resolution, and automation for clinical and epidemiological studies. Coupling this rapid method with real-time data processing and standardization protocols will further advance large-scale metabolomic profiling and biomarker discovery.
Conclusion
A generic UPLC-MS/MS platform was successfully adapted to deliver a fast, robust, and derivatization-free method for semi-quantitative analysis of 26 free fatty acids in human serum. The approach offers high throughput, streamlined sample preparation, and compatibility with a multi-omics research framework, promoting efficient biomarker research and metabolic studies.
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