Phospholipids
are essential components of cell membranes and organelles. Furthermore, they
are present in body fluids, particularly in the blood, where lipids are made
"water-soluble" in the form of lipoproteins to enable their transport
in an aqueous environment. The ubiquitous occurrence of lipids led to thedevelopment of different analytical "lipidomics" techniques, whereby
the majority of these methods are based on mass spectrometry (MS). Although
there was an enormous progress in this field, lipid analysis is still considered
to be challenging due to the extreme structural variability of lipids which
leads to the appearance of hundreds of different lipid species in a typical
biological sample . This is due to the different headgroups such as
phosphorylcholine or -ethanolamine, the different fatty acyl residues ranging
from saturated residues such as myristic acid (14:0) up to highly unsaturated
residues such as docosahexaenoic acid (22:6) and the linkage types (acyl-acyl-,
alkylacyl-, and alkenyl-acyl).

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