Spatiotemporal lipid profiling during early embryo development of Xenopus laevis using dynamic Time-of-Flight Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) Imaging
Journal article, 2014

Time-of-Flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) imaging has been used for the direct analysis of single intact Xenopus laevis (X. laevis) embryo surfaces, locating multiple lipids during fertilisation and the early embryo development stages with sub-cellular lateral resolution (~4 Microns). The method avoids the complicated sample preparation for lipid analysis of the embryos, which requires selective chemical extraction of a pool of samples and chromatographic separation, while preserving the spatial distribution of biological species. The results show ToF-SIMS is capable of profiling multiple components (e.g., glycerophosphocholine, sphingomyelin, cholesterol, vitamin E, diacylglycerol, triacylglycerol) in a single X. laevis embryo. We observe lipid remodelling during fertilisation and early embryo development via time course sampling. The study also reveals the lipid distribution on the gametes fusion site. The methodology used in the study opens the possibility of studying developmental biology using high resolution imaging MS and of understanding the functional role of the biological molecules.

Author

Hua Tian

Raphael Thuret

Alex Henderson

Nancy Papalopulu

John Vickerman

Nicholas Lockyer

Journal of Lipid Research

0022-2275 (ISSN) 1539-7262 (eISSN)

Vol. Epub ahead of print

Subject Categories

Analytical Chemistry

Developmental Biology

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Created

10/10/2017