desorption electrospray ionization
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Metabolites ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 33
Author(s):  
Matthew J. Smith ◽  
Ralf J. M. Weber ◽  
Mark R. Viant

Untargeted lipidomics has previously been applied to the study of daphnids and the discovery of biomarkers that are indicative of toxicity. Typically, liquid chromatography—mass spectrometry is used to measure the changes in lipid abundance in whole-body homogenates of daphnids, each only ca. 3 mm in length which limits any biochemical interpretation of site-specific toxicity. Here, we applied mass spectrometry imaging of Daphnia magna to combine untargeted lipidomics with spatial resolution to map the molecular perturbations to defined anatomical regions. A desorption electrospray ionization—mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) method was optimized and applied to tissue sections of daphnids exposed to bisphenol-A (BPA) compared to unexposed controls, generating an untargeted mass spectrum at each pixel (35 µm2/pixel) within each section. First, unique lipid profiles from distinct tissue types were identified in whole-body daphnids using principal component analysis, specifically distinguishing appendages, eggs, eye, and gut. Second, changes in the lipidome were mapped over four stages of normal egg development and then the effect of BPA exposure on the egg lipidome was characterized. The primary perturbations to the lipidome were annotated as triacylglycerides and phosphatidylcholine, and the distributions of the individual lipid species within these classes were visualized in whole-body D. magna sections as ion images. Using an optimized DESI-MS workflow, the first ion images of D. magna tissue sections were generated, mapping both their baseline and BPA-perturbed lipidomes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiansong Chen ◽  
Yue Hu ◽  
Congxiang Shao ◽  
Haiyun Zhou ◽  
Zhiyue Lv

The application of desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (DESI-MS) and dried blood spot (DBS) sampling has been successfully implemented several times. However, the difficulty of combining DBS sampling with DESI-MS is still the carrier material used for the blood samples. In this study, a new, easily obtained, and cost-effective carrier substrate for dried plasma spot (DPS) sampling and DESI-MS analysis and its application in phospholipidomics studies was described. First, the effects of several carrier materials, including cellulose-based materials (31 ET paper and filter paper) and non-cellulose-based materials (PARAFILM and its shape-modified material, PTFE-printed glass slide and polyvinylidene fluoride film), were tested. Second, a method combining DPS sampling with DESI-MS for phospholipidomics analysis was established, and parameters affecting compound signal intensities, such as sample volume and sprayer solvent system, were optimized. In conclusion, the total signal intensity obtained from shape-modified PARAFILM was the strongest. The suitable plasma sample volume deposited on PARAFILM carriers was 5 μl, and acetonitrile (ACN) was recommended as the optimal spray solvent for phospholipid (PL) profiling. Repeatability (87.5% of compounds with CV < 30%) and stability for data acquisition (48 h) were confirmed. Finally, the developed method was applied in phospholipidomics analysis of schistosomiasis, and a distinguished classification between control mice and infected mice was observed by using multivariate pattern recognition analysis, confirming the practical application of this new carrier material for DPS sampling and DESI-MS analysis. Compared with a previously reported method, the rapid metabolomics screening approach based on the implementation of DPS sampling coupled with the DESI-MS instrument developed in this study has increased analyte sensitivity, which may promote its further application in clinical studies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pei Su ◽  
John P. McGee ◽  
Kenneth R. Durbin ◽  
Michael A. R. Hollas ◽  
Manxi Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractImaging of proteoforms in human tissues is hindered by low molecular specificity and limited proteome coverage. Here, we introduce proteoform imaging mass spectrometry (PiMS), which increases the size limit for proteoform detection and identification by 4-fold compared to reported methods, and reveals tissue localization of proteoforms at <80 μm spatial resolution. PiMS advances proteoform imaging by combining liquid sampling (nanospray desorption electrospray ionization, nano-DESI) with ion detection using individual ion mass spectrometry (I2MS). We demonstrate the first proteoform imaging of human kidney, identifying 169 of 400 proteoforms <70 kDa using top-down mass spectrometry and database lookup from the human proteoform atlas, including dozens of key enzymes in primary metabolism. Moreover, PiMS images visualize kidney anatomical structures and cellular neighborhoods in the vasculature versus the medulla or the cortex. The benefits of PiMS are poised to increase proteome coverage for label-free protein imaging of intact tissues.TeaserNano-DESI combined with individual ion mass spectrometry generates images of proteoforms up to 70 kDa.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (49) ◽  
pp. e2109633118
Author(s):  
Berkley M. Ellis ◽  
Piyoosh K. Babele ◽  
Jody C. May ◽  
Carl H. Johnson ◽  
Brian F. Pfleger ◽  
...  

Reading and writing DNA were once the rate-limiting step in synthetic biology workflows. This has been replaced by the search for the optimal target sequences to produce systems with desired properties. Directed evolution and screening mutant libraries are proven technologies for isolating strains with enhanced performance whenever specialized assays are available for rapidly detecting a phenotype of interest. Armed with technologies such as CRISPR-Cas9, these experiments are capable of generating libraries of up to 1010 genetic variants. At a rate of 102 samples per day, standard analytical methods for assessing metabolic phenotypes represent a major bottleneck to modern synthetic biology workflows. To address this issue, we have developed a desorption electrospray ionization–imaging mass spectrometry screening assay that directly samples microorganisms. This technology increases the throughput of metabolic measurements by reducing sample preparation and analyzing organisms in a multiplexed fashion. To further accelerate synthetic biology workflows, we utilized untargeted acquisitions and unsupervised analytics to assess multiple targets for future engineering strategies within a single acquisition. We demonstrate the utility of the developed method using Escherichia coli strains engineered to overproduce free fatty acids. We determined discrete metabolic phenotypes associated with each strain, which include the primary fatty acid product, secondary products, and additional metabolites outside the engineered product pathway. Furthermore, we measured changes in amino acid levels and membrane lipid composition, which affect cell viability. In sum, we present an analytical method to accelerate synthetic biology workflows through rapid, untargeted, and multiplexed metabolomic analyses.


Metabolites ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 810
Author(s):  
Ying Xi ◽  
David C. Muddiman

Mass spectrometry imaging is a powerful tool to analyze a large number of metabolites with their spatial coordinates collected throughout the sample. However, the significant differences in ionization efficiency pose a big challenge to metabolomic mass spectrometry imaging. To solve the challenge and obtain a complete data profile, researchers typically perform experiments in both positive and negative ionization modes, which is time-consuming. In this work, we evaluated the use of the dicationic reagent, 1,5-pentanediyl-bis(1-butylpyrrolidinium) difluoride (abbreviated to [C5(bpyr)2]F2) to detect a broad range of metabolites in the positive ionization mode by infrared matrix-assisted laser desorption electrospray ionization mass spectrometry imaging (IR-MALDESI MSI). [C5(bpyr)2]F2 at 10 µM was doped in 50% MeOH/H2O (v/v) electrospray solvent to form +1 charged adducted ions with anionic species (−1 charged) through post-electrospray ionization. This method was demonstrated with sectioned rat liver and hen ovary. A total of 73 deprotonated metabolites from rat liver tissue sections were successfully adducted with [C5(bpyr)2]2+ and putatively identified in the adducted positive ionization polarity, along with 164 positively charged metabolite ions commonly seen in positive ionization mode, which resulted in 44% increased molecular coverage. In addition, we were able to generate images of hen ovary sections showing their morphological features. Following-up tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) indicated that this dicationic reagent [C5(bpyr)2]2+ could form ionic bonds with the headgroup of glycerophospholipid ions. The addition of the dicationic reagent [C5(bpyr)2]2+ in the electrospray solvent provides a rapid and effective way to enhance the detection of metabolites in positive ionization mode.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan Pu ◽  
Scott A Ugrin ◽  
Andrew J Radosevich ◽  
David Chang-Yen ◽  
James W Sawicki ◽  
...  

Mass spectrometry (MS) is the primary analytical tool used to characterize proteins within the biopharmaceutical industry. Electrospray ionization (ESI) coupled to liquid chromatography is the gold standard technique for intact protein analysis. However, speed limitations prevent analysis of large sample numbers (>1000) in a day. Infrared matrix-assisted laser desorption electrospray ionization (IR-MALDESI) MS, an ambient ionization MS technology, has recently been established as a platform for high throughput small molecule analysis. Here we report the application of such system for intact protein analysis. Up to 150 kDa proteins are detectable on a high throughput IR-MALDESI-MS system and we have evaluated how matrix affects signal. The system can analyze up to 22 protein samples in a second. Protein autophosphorylation, compound binding kinetics and compound modifications to a probe protein are demonstrated as applications. Top-down protein sequencing was conducted to identify a cysteine modification site. Two plate-based high throughput sample cleanup methods were coupled to IR-MALDESI-MS to enable analysis of samples containing high amounts of salts and buffers without compromising speed.


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