Lipidomics is a well-established field, enabled by modern liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS) technology, rapidly generating large amounts of data. Lipid extracts derived from biological samples are complex, and most spectral features in LC-MS lipidomics data sets remain unidentified. In-depth analyses of commercial triacylglycerol, diacylglycerol, and cholesterol ester standards revealed the expected ammoniated and sodiated ions as well as five additional unidentified higher mass peaks with relatively high intensities. The identities and origin of these unknown peaks were investigated by modifying the chromatographic mobile-phase components and LC-MS source parameters. Tandem MS (MS/MS) of each unknown adduct peak yielded no lipid structural information, producing only an intense ion of the adducted species. The unknown adducts were identified as low-mass contaminants originating from methanol and isopropanol in the mobile phase. Each contaminant was determined to be an alkylated amine species using their monoisotopic masses to calculate molecular formulas. Analysis of bovine liver extract identified 33 neutral lipids with an additional 73 alkyl amine adducts. Analysis of LC-MS-grade methanol and isopropanol from different vendors revealed substantial alkylated amine contamination in one out of three different brands that were tested. Substituting solvents for ones with lower levels of alkyl amine contamination increased lipid annotations by 36.5% or 27.4%, depending on the vendor, and resulted in >2.5-fold increases in peak area for neutral lipid species without affecting polar lipid analysis. These findings demonstrate the importance of solvent selection and disclosure for lipidomics protocols and highlight some of the major challenges when comparing data between experiments.
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