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Targeted lipidomics – advances in profiling lysophosphocholine and platelet‐activating factor second messengers
Author(s) -
Xu Hongbin,
Valenzuela Nicolas,
Fai Stephen,
Figeys Daniel,
Bennett Steffany A. L.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/febs.12423
Subject(s) - lipidome , lipidomics , second messenger system , chemistry , degree of unsaturation , receptor , biochemistry , computational biology , signal transduction , lipid raft , biology , organic chemistry
Glycerophosphocholines are the major building blocks of biological membranes. They are also precursors of low‐molecular‐weight second messengers with mass to charge ratios of 450–600. These messengers include lysophosphatidylcholines ( LPC s) and lyso ‐ platelet activating factors ( PAF s) that may be further processed into PAF s. Often considered as a single species, LPC s, PAF s and lyso‐ PAF s are, in fact, families of glycerophosphocholine‐derived lipids distinguished by the linkage of their sn ‐1 carbon chains to the phosphoglyceride backbone (ester or ether), their sn ‐1 carbon chain length and degree of unsaturation, and the identity of their sn ‐2 constituents (a hydroxyl or acetyl group). Each LPC and PAF species exhibits a different affinity for its cognate G ‐protein‐coupled receptors, and each species elicits receptor‐independent actions that play critical signalling roles. Targeted mass spectrometry‐based lipidomic approaches are enabling the molecular identification and quantification of these low‐abundance second messengers. Variations between datasets map the temporal landscape of second messengers available for signalling, and provide snapshots of the state of structural membrane compositional remodelling at the time of extraction. Here, we review a number of advances in lipidomic methodologies used to identify LPC s, lyso‐ PAF s and PAF s, and highlight how these targeted approaches are providing valuable insight into the roles played by the cellular lipidome in cell function and disease susceptibility.