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  • Title: Separation of phospholipids by high-performance liquid chromatography: all major classes, including ethanolamine and choline plasmalogens, and most minor classes, including lysophosphatidylethanolamine.
    Author: Dugan LL, Demediuk P, Pendley CE, Horrocks LA.
    Journal: J Chromatogr; 1986 Jun 13; 378(2):317-27. PubMed ID: 3733991.
    Abstract:
    High-performance liquid chromatographic methods for the separation and quantitation of phospholipids were developed and shown to give sensitive, reliable measurements of tissue phospholipids, including difficult-to-resolve pairs such as choline plasmalogen (plasmenylcholine) and phosphatidylcholine, choline glycerophospholipids and sphingomyelin, phosphatidylinositol and phosphatidylserine, and phosphatidylserine and lysophosphatidylethanolamine. Separations of most phospholipids including those mentioned above are more complete than in existing procedures, and require only 40 min per injection. Utilization of the hexane-2-propanol-water system has an advantage over separation techniques that employ acidic solvents in that the plasmalogens are not hydrolyzed and a less degradative environment for labile lipids is provided. Further, a rapid high-performance liquid chromatographic procedure for the separation of intact ethanolamine plasmalogen (plasmenylethanolamine) from phosphatidylethanolamine was developed. Previous procedures have required derivatized samples or acid hydrolysis of the plasmalogen vinyl ether linkage. A slight modification of the primary method (method I) increases the resolution of lysophosphatidylethanolamine from other classes (method II). A third modification (method III) can replace the standard silicic acid column separation of lipids into neutral, glycolipid, and phospholipid fractions.
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