Development of a Laser Microdissection-Coupled Quantitative Shotgun Lipidomic Method to Uncover Spatial Heterogeneity

Author:

Varga-Zsíros Vanda12ORCID,Migh Ede1,Marton Annamária1,Kóta Zoltán3,Vizler Csaba1,Tiszlavicz László4,Horváth Péter1,Török Zsolt1ORCID,Vígh László1ORCID,Balogh Gábor1ORCID,Péter Mária1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Biochemistry, Biological Research Centre, Eötvös Loránd Research Network, 6726 Szeged, Hungary

2. Faculty of Science and Informatics, Ph.D. School in Biology, University of Szeged, 6726 Szeged, Hungary

3. Single Cell Omics Advanced Core Facility, Hungarian Centre of Excellence for Molecular Medicine, 6726 Szeged, Hungary

4. Albert Szent-Györgyi Medical Centre, Department of Pathology, University of Szeged, 6725 Szeged, Hungary

Abstract

Lipid metabolic disturbances are associated with several diseases, such as type 2 diabetes or malignancy. In the last two decades, high-performance mass spectrometry-based lipidomics has emerged as a valuable tool in various fields of biology. However, the evaluation of macroscopic tissue homogenates leaves often undiscovered the differences arising from micron-scale heterogeneity. Therefore, in this work, we developed a novel laser microdissection-coupled shotgun lipidomic platform, which combines quantitative and broad-range lipidome analysis with reasonable spatial resolution. The multistep approach involves the preparation of successive cryosections from tissue samples, cross-referencing of native and stained images, laser microdissection of regions of interest, in situ lipid extraction, and quantitative shotgun lipidomics. We used mouse liver and kidney as well as a 2D cell culture model to validate the novel workflow in terms of extraction efficiency, reproducibility, and linearity of quantification. We established that the limit of dissectible sample area corresponds to about ten cells while maintaining good lipidome coverage. We demonstrate the performance of the method in recognizing tissue heterogeneity on the example of a mouse hippocampus. By providing topological mapping of lipid metabolism, the novel platform might help to uncover region-specific lipidomic alterations in complex samples, including tumors.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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