91亚色传媒

Lipid News

The International Lipidomics Society: Who we are and where we are heading

Robert Ahrends Kim Ekroos
By Robert Ahrends and Kim Ekroos
March 23, 2021

The human body must regulate lipid metabolism and signaling tightly to maintain homeostasis. Loss of control can result in unwanted cascades of events triggering disorders and diseases such as insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, lipidic storage diseases, neurodegenerative disorders or cancer. Lipidomics technologies have evolved to monitor such changes, with researchers expecting these technologies to provide improved opportunities to study lipids in health and disease and advance lipid biology at systems scale, including complex lipid signaling and metabolism.

ILS-445x250.jpg
Robert Ahrends
The International Lipidomics Society comprises groups that are developing
lipidomics standards guidelines; reference materials; clinical lipidomics;
instrumental and methodological workflows; and tools for applied bioinformatics,
ontology and better understanding of lipid function, thereby stimulating
communication among lipid biology, medicine and surrounding disciplines.

Methodologies, workflows and data presentation differ vastly in lipidomics, and many studies do not report absolute lipid concentrations. This hinders biological interpretation, which only can be done using quantified molecule numbers, such as in moles. The broadly recognized discrepancies in published data, such as misidentification and broader issues of irreproducibility, weaken lipidomics research and hinder its use as noted in by Gerhard Liebisch, Robert Ahrends and other members of the Lipidomics Standards Initiative Consortium in the journal Nature Metabolism in August 2019. This has a negative effect, causing deliveries in market segments to fall short and interfering with advances in drug and biomarker discovery programs, interlaboratory studies and transitions into clinical practice.

To start tackling these challenges, we have formed the , or ILS, with the aim of fostering international communitywide coordination and communication to create lipidomics-specific guidelines for good scientific practice and future development.

We founded the ILS in June 2019 with Gerhard Liebisch, Harald K枚feler, Michal Hol膷apek, Xianlin Han and Markus Wenk. The society sees itself as the point of contact for lipidomics research, development and commercialization. By working together, we aim to unlock the full potential of lipidomics and its adoption in the clinical arena. 

Our goal is to stimulate conversation with our colleagues in lipid biology, medicine and related disciplines. We intend to engage researchers around the globe who are working on developing lipidomics standards guidelines, reference materials, clinical lipidomics, instruments and methodologies. We also have started interest groups that are working on such hot topics as applied bioinformatics, lipid ontology and lipid function. All these groups are up and running and are engaging with the ILS; the first white papers are on their way to transform lipidomics research.

During the first year of the ILS, we held vibrant workshops on subject areas including lipidomics bioinformatics. Participants discussed topics such as one-stop workflows, data formats, visualization of lipidomes and the engagement of junior researchers. The interest group reference materials included the first intercontinental ceramide ring trial across 47 labs. Similar activities now are being organized by our clinical lipidomics group. The Lipidomics Standards Initiative released updated lipid nomenclature together with our friends at Lipid Maps and currently is publishing new guidelines for lipidomics research.

In total, more than 800 attendees have visited our workshops and symposia and engaged with the most pressing challenges in the field. 

For more information, visit us at  and connect with us at contact@lipidomicssociety.org.

Enjoy reading 91亚色传媒 Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition weekly.

Learn more
Robert Ahrends
Robert Ahrends

Robert Ahrends is a professor of chemistry in the department of analytical chemistry at the University of Vienna.

Kim Ekroos
Kim Ekroos

Kim Ekroos is the founder and CEO of Lipidomics Consulting Ltd., Esbo, Finland, and president of the International Lipidomics Society.

Get the latest from 91亚色传媒 Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

Meet Robert Helsley
Interview

Meet Robert Helsley

March 6, 2025

The Journal of Lipid Research junior associate editor studies chronic liver disease and was the first in his family to attend college.

From the Journals: MCP
Journal News

From the Journals: MCP

March 4, 2025

Protein acetylation helps plants adapt to light. Mapping protein locations in 3D tissues. Demystifying the glycan鈥損rotein interactome. Read about these recent papers.

Exploring life鈥檚 blueprint: Gene expression in development and evolution
In-person Conference

Exploring life鈥檚 blueprint: Gene expression in development and evolution

March 3, 2025

Meet Julia Zeitlinger and David Arnosti 鈥 two co-chairs of the 91亚色传媒鈥檚 2025 meeting on gene expression, to be held June 26-29, in Kansas City, Missouri.

From the journals: JLR
Journal News

From the journals: JLR

Feb. 27, 2025

Protein analysis of dopaminergic neurons. Predicting immunotherapy responses in lung cancer. ZASP: An efficient proteomics sample prep method. Read about papers on these topics recently published in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

New mass spectrometry assay speeds up UTI diagnosis
Journal News

New mass spectrometry assay speeds up UTI diagnosis

Feb. 25, 2025

Scientists in Quebec use liquid chromatography鈥搈ass spectrometry to reduce the time needed to test for bacteria in urine from days to minutes 鈥 and with smaller samples.

From the journals: MCP
Journal News

From the journals: MCP

Feb. 21, 2025

Protein analysis of dopaminergic neurons. Predicting immunotherapy responses in lung cancer. ZASP: An efficient proteomics sample prep method. Read about papers on these topics recently published in Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.