Utilizing Skyline to analyze lipidomics data containing liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry and mass spectrometry dimensions.
Kaylie I KirkwoodBrian S PrattNicholas ShulmanKaipo TamuraMichael J MacCossBrendan X MacLeanErin S BakerPublished in: Nature protocols (2022)
Lipidomics studies suffer from analytical and annotation challenges because of the great structural similarity of many of the lipid species. To improve lipid characterization and annotation capabilities beyond those afforded by traditional mass spectrometry (MS)-based methods, multidimensional separation methods such as those integrating liquid chromatography, ion mobility spectrometry, collision-induced dissociation and MS (LC-IMS-CID-MS) may be used. Although LC-IMS-CID-MS and other multidimensional methods offer valuable hydrophobicity, structural and mass information, the files are also complex and difficult to assess. Thus, the development of software tools to rapidly process and facilitate confident lipid annotations is essential. In this Protocol Extension, we use the freely available, vendor-neutral and open-source software Skyline to process and annotate multidimensional lipidomic data. Although Skyline ( https://skyline.ms/skyline.url ) was established for targeted processing of LC-MS-based proteomics data, it has since been extended such that it can be used to analyze small-molecule data as well as data containing the IMS dimension. This protocol uses Skyline's recently expanded capabilities, including small-molecule spectral libraries, indexed retention time and ion mobility filtering, and provides a step-by-step description for importing data, predicting retention times, validating lipid annotations, exporting results and editing our manually validated 500+ lipid library. Although the time required to complete the steps outlined here varies on the basis of multiple factors such as dataset size and familiarity with Skyline, this protocol takes ~5.5 h to complete when annotations are rigorously verified for maximum confidence.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- gas chromatography
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- small molecule
- tandem mass spectrometry
- electronic health record
- high performance liquid chromatography
- high resolution
- capillary electrophoresis
- simultaneous determination
- big data
- multiple sclerosis
- randomized controlled trial
- solid phase extraction
- fatty acid
- healthcare
- social media
- optical coherence tomography
- oxidative stress
- artificial intelligence
- crispr cas
- protein protein
- drug induced
- psychometric properties
- genetic diversity
- stress induced
- endothelial cells