Hi, Just a quick comment - some membrane lipids have to form adducts when they don't ionise easily on their own - we add ammonium hydroxide and formic acid to maximize adducts of one type- compared to scavenging sodium, potassium, chloride etc etc. you'll either see +H or +NH4 in positive, and -H or +formate in negative - this can have a significant impact on detection limits for those lipids. We also prefer to use a normal phase HPLC method for membrane lipids, a diol column with hexane / IPA eluents - then your membrane lipids are separated according to headgroup and not fatty acids... makes like much easier - not sure what cholesterol looks like on that method though, probably isn't retained.
even if you don't change your HPLC method try looking for other adducts that might be there - PG and PC both readily form Na adducts in +ve. good luck
[quote="badescuvo"]Hello friends,
Has any of you detected phospholipids (DMPC, DMPG, HSPC) and Cholesterol with a Waters LC-MS UPLC/SQD (Single Quadrupole Detector)? I used a Waters UPLC@BEH C18 (2.1 mmX50 mm, 1.7 um), I see some peaks with the desired m/z in the XIC with 99%MeOH/H2O with 0.1% HCOOH (starting with a gradient H2O/MeOH), but there is a lot of background noise in the blank (50%MeOH/H2O), difficult to interpret.
Any input is very much appreciated.[/quote]