Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Surveying the lipid landscape with newly unveiled lipid analysis software

Surveying the lipid landscape
Credit: Nature Communications (2020).

Researchers increasingly aim at using the manifold functions of lipids in our bodies, e.g., as blood fats or in blood coagulation, to better understand and predict diseases. An international team around Robert Ahrends at the Faculty of Chemistry of the University of Vienna has now presented a groundbreaking tool for efficient lipid analysis in the journal Nature Communications. Their software LipidCreator highly accelerates the analysis of specific lipid groups and lipid signal molecules, and allows their qualitative and quantitative characterization with mass spectrometry. The scientists applied the new method successfully in an analysis of blood components.

Lipids have great potential as biomarkers. Life as we know it is wrapped in lipids, fats and waxes: They form cells and organelles, convey information, protect organisms from harsh environmental conditions, and serve as energy building blocks. "It is not long ago that we had an idea about the diversity of lipid functions," says biochemist Robert Ahrends, who started his tenure track professorship in lipidomics—i.e., the analysis of the total lipids of a cell, tissue or organism—at the University of Vienna at the beginning of this year.

The innovative software LipidCreator can take lipidomics to the next level. "The software enables scientists to come up with new, targeted lipidomics assays, to make them easily available to other labs, and to retrieve and include comprehensive knowledge and data from other studies, as the software also serves as an online database for lipidomic research," study author Robert Ahrends from the Department of Analytical Chemistry explains.

Based on the software, scientists now can quantify about 60 lipid classes and their lipid signaling molecules in much bigger studies than previously; they can quickly set up workflows for the analysis of new target molecules, and easily check and validate the results.

Salvaging the treasure of Lipids

Lipids are chemically very diverse. They have a and consist of combinations of building blocks, such as sugars, fatty acyl groups, and various types of bonds. Mass spectrometry (MS) has become faster and more sensitive in recent years. Special further developments of MS today enable the identification of up to 500 lipids, and the chemical components and structures of the lipids can be decoded via the masses of the individual lipid fragments. Despite the rapid growth of lipidomics, comprehensive software solutions for targeted mass spectrometric analyses of specific groups have been lacking until now.

Clinical interest

Ahrends and his team have already applied their , proving their high potential for clinical applications: Lipids in different forms are important sources of energy that are transported within the blood. As important factors in signal transmission between cells, they are also involved in the activation of blood platelets (thrombocytes), which in turn are important for blood clotting. Based on LipidCreator, the scientists successfully characterized lipids in blood plasma and analyzed the role of lipids in platelet activation. According to the scientists, data gained from these kind of surveys might even help to identify relevant factors for coagulation and for the development of thrombosis.

More information: Bing Peng et al. LipidCreator workbench to probe the lipidomic landscape, Nature Communications (2020).

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by University of Vienna

Citation: Surveying the lipid landscape with newly unveiled lipid analysis software (2020, April 29) retrieved 3 June 2025 from /news/2020-04-surveying-lipid-landscape-newly-unveiled.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

The Lipid Code: New chemical tools can control the concentration of lipids in living cells

88 shares

Feedback to editors