Abstract

Herein we report an improved method to separate cardiolipin (Ptd(2)Gro) from tissue total lipid extracts using a biphasic solvent system combined with high performance liquid chromatography. This method uses a normal phase silica column and two mobile phases: mobile phase A that was n-hexane:2-propanol (3:2 by vol) and mobile phase B that was n-hexane:2-propanol:water (56.7:37.8:5.5 by vol). The initial solvent conditions were 95% A and 5% B, with a flow rate of 1.5 mL/min. The samples were from non-derivatized aliquots of liver, heart, or brain lipid extracts. The peak corresponding to Ptd(2)Gro appeared at 31 min, was well defined and did not overlap with neighboring peaks. The adjacent peak corresponded to ethanolamine glycerophospholipids and the remaining phospholipids were eluted in a single peak. The identity of the phospholipids separated by this method was verified by thin layer chromatography (TLC) and fatty acid analysis, which confirmed that the Ptd(2)Gro was well resolved from other phospholipids. This method is useful to separate and quantify Ptd(2)Gro from small tissue samples thereby avoiding the variability associated with TLC methods.

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