Combining chromatography, trapped ion mobility, accurate mass and fragment information enables confident discovery and annotation of novel lipids in this key model organism.
Caenorhabditis elegans, a small nematode, is an indispensable model organism in biomedical research. Despite its small size, C. elegans has a rich and diverse lipidome, which is still not fully understood. In addition to several known lipid classes, the C. elegans lipidome contains several unique lipid classes and lipid-like molecules such as glycerophospho-N-acyl ethanolamides (GPNAE) and sugar-based lipids such ascarosides.
Profiling the C. elegans lipidome with 4D-Lipidomics™, Dr. Witting and his team recently characterized multiple new lipid species from different lipid classes, notably GPNAE. GPNAE represent potential intermediates in the biosynthesis of N-acylethanolamides, which themselves are potent signaling molecules in the endocannabinoid system. Other examples include novel sphingolipids and derivates.
In this webinar, Dr. Witting will describe the structured approach his team employed to discover lipids and increase confidence in their annotation using library-free workflows. Specifically, he will discuss:
PD Dr. Michael Witting, Deputy Head Metabolomics and Proteomics Core & Executive Manager Metabolomics, Helmholtz Munich, Munich, Germany
PD Dr. Michael Witting is Co-Head of the Metabolomics and Proteomics Core at Helmholtz Munich, where he leads metabolomics and lipidomics activities and supports multiomics research. He is also a lecturer at the TUM School of Life Sciences, Technical University of Munich.
His research and expertise center on metabolomics, lipidomics, and advanced mass spectrometry methods, including TIMS-enabled multidimensional analysis.
Aiko Barsch, Director Application Developments Metabolomics/Lipidomics, Bruker, Bremen, Germany
Reserve your spot today and discover how 4D‑Lipidomics™ unlocks deeper lipid insight with library‑free and rule‑based analysis.
*仅供研究使用,不能用于临床诊断程序。