A novel stable isotope labelling assisted workflow for improved untargeted LC-HRMS based metabolomics research.

Metabolomics

Department for Agrobiotechnology (IFA-Tulln), Center for Analytical Chemistry and Institute for Biotechnology in Plant Production, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna (BOKU), Konrad-Lorenz-Str. 20, 3430 Tulln, Austria.

Published: December 2013

Many untargeted LC-ESI-HRMS based metabolomics studies are still hampered by the large proportion of non-biological sample derived signals included in the generated raw data. Here, a novel, powerful stable isotope labelling (SIL)-based metabolomics workflow is presented, which facilitates global metabolome extraction, improved metabolite annotation and metabolome wide internal standardisation (IS). The general concept is exemplified with two different cultivation variants, (1) co-cultivation of the plant pathogenic fungi on non-labelled and highly C enriched culture medium and (2) experimental cultivation under native conditions and use of globally U-C labelled biological reference samples as exemplified with maize and wheat. Subsequent to LC-HRMS analysis of mixtures of labelled and non-labelled samples, two-dimensional data filtering of SIL specific isotopic patterns is performed to better extract truly biological derived signals together with the corresponding number of carbon atoms of each metabolite ion. Finally, feature pairs are convoluted to feature groups each representing a single metabolite. Moreover, the correction of unequal matrix effects in different sample types and the improvement of relative metabolite quantification with metabolome wide IS are demonstrated for the experiment. Data processing employing the presented workflow revealed about 300 SIL derived feature pairs corresponding to 87-135 metabolites in samples and around 800 feature pairs corresponding to roughly 350 metabolites in wheat samples. SIL assisted IS, by the use of globally U-C labelled biological samples, reduced the median CV value from 7.1 to 3.6 % for technical replicates and from 15.1 to 10.8 % for biological replicates in the respective samples.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4098048PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11306-013-0611-0DOI Listing

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