Abstract

The evaluation of double bond positions in fatty acyl chains has always been of great concern given their significance in the chemical and biochemical role of lipids. Despite being the foremost technique for lipidomics, it is difficult in practice to obtain identification beyond the fatty acyl level by the sole high-resolution mass spectrometry. Paternò–Büchi reactions of fatty acids (FAs) with ketones have been successfully proposed for pinpointing double bonds in FAs in combination with the collision-induced fragmentation technique. In the present paper, an aza-Paternò–Büchi (aPB) reaction of lipids with 6-azauracil (6-AU) was proposed for the first time for the determination of carbon–carbon double bonds in fatty acyl chains using higher collisional dissociation in the negative ion mode. The method was optimized using free FA and phospholipid analytical standards and compared to the standard Paternò–Büchi reaction with acetone. The introduction of the 6-AU moiety allowed enhancing the ionization efficiency of the FA precursor and diagnostic product ions, thanks to the presence of ionizable sites on the derivatizing agent. Moreover, the aPB derivatization allowed the obtention of deprotonated ions of phosphatidylcholines, thanks to an intramolecular methyl transfer from the phosphocholine polar heads during ionization. The workflow was finally applied for pinpointing carbon–carbon double bonds in 77 polar lipids from an yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) extract.

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