- Analysis of isomeric long-chain hydroxy fatty acids by tandem mass spectrometry: application to the diagnosis of long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.
Analysis of isomeric long-chain hydroxy fatty acids by tandem mass spectrometry: application to the diagnosis of long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.
Acetyl trimethylaminoethyl ester iodide derivatives have been used to selectively analyze isomeric long-chain hydroxy fatty acids by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS). The binary derivatives of 2-, 3-, 12- and 16-hydroxypalmitic acids afford remarkably different product ion spectra. Further discrimination between isomers is possible by acylating with pivaloyl chloride. 2- and omega-Hydroxy long-chain fatty acids form pivaloyl esters in quantitative yield whereas other secondary alcohols only partially react. Cotton-based filter paper used for blood collection contains substantial amounts of esterified long-chain hydroxy fatty acids. From the product ion spectra of the acetyl trimethylaminoethyl esters the hydroxydocosanoic and -tetracosanoic acids are >90% omega-hydroxy. All remaining saturated and unsaturated hydroxy acids are >90% 2-hydroxy acids. A method for the quantification of free 3-hydroxypalmitic acid in plasma by ESI-MS/MS for the diagnosis of long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (LCHAD) is described. Median plasma concentrations of 0.43 micromol/L (control, n = 22) and 12.2 micromol/L (LCHAD, n = 3) were obtained from 5 microL plasma samples.