7 research outputs found

    Maximizing MS/MS Acquisition for Lipidomics Using Capillary Separation and Orbitrap Tribrid Mass Spectrometer

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    Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is a typical strategy for lipidomics analysis. Although capillary LC-MS is a common analytical technique for proteomics analysis, its application to lipidomics has been limited. In this study, we aim at improving lipid identifications achieved in a single LC-MS analysis by a 3-fold approach: capillary LC and nanoelectrospray for enhanced ionization, ion trap for higher sensitivity tandem MS, and parallelization of mass analyzers for increased speed of acquisition on an Orbitrap hybrid system. By applying the methods to a complex lipid mixture of human plasma, we identified and performed relative quantification on over 1500 lipids within a 60 min capillary LC-MS analysis

    Maximizing MS/MS Acquisition for Lipidomics Using Capillary Separation and Orbitrap Tribrid Mass Spectrometer

    No full text
    Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) is a typical strategy for lipidomics analysis. Although capillary LC-MS is a common analytical technique for proteomics analysis, its application to lipidomics has been limited. In this study, we aim at improving lipid identifications achieved in a single LC-MS analysis by a 3-fold approach: capillary LC and nanoelectrospray for enhanced ionization, ion trap for higher sensitivity tandem MS, and parallelization of mass analyzers for increased speed of acquisition on an Orbitrap hybrid system. By applying the methods to a complex lipid mixture of human plasma, we identified and performed relative quantification on over 1500 lipids within a 60 min capillary LC-MS analysis

    Rapid Targeted Quantitation of Protein Overexpression with Direct Infusion Shotgun Proteome Analysis (DISPA-PRM)

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    While much effort has been placed on comprehensive quantitative proteome analysis, certain applications demand the measurement of only a few target proteins from complex systems. Traditional approaches to targeted proteomics rely on nanoliquid chromatography (nLC) and targeted mass spectrometry (MS) methods, e.g., parallel reaction monitoring (PRM). However, the time requirement for nLC can limit the throughput of targeted proteomics. To achieve rapid and high-throughput targeted methods, here we show that nLC separations can be eliminated and replaced with direct infusion shotgun proteome analysis (DISPA) using high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) with PRM. We demonstrate the application of DISPA-PRM for rapid targeted quantification of bacterial enzymes utilized in the production of biofuels by monitoring temporal expression in 72 metabolically engineered bacterial cultures in less than 2.5 h, with a measured dynamic range >1200-fold. We conclude that DISPA-PRM presents a valuable innovative tool with results comparable to nLC-MS/MS, enabling fast and rapid detection of targeted proteins in complex mixtures

    Evaluation of the Orbitrap Ascend Tribrid Mass Spectrometer for Shotgun Proteomics

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    Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is a powerful technology to globally profile protein abundances, activities, interactions, and modifications. The extreme complexity of proteomics samples, which often contain hundreds of thousands of analytes, necessitates continuous development of MS techniques and instrumentation to improve speed, sensitivity, precision, and accuracy, among other analytical characteristics. Here, we systematically evaluated the Orbitrap Ascend Tribrid mass spectrometer in the context of shotgun proteomics, and we compared its performance to that of the previous generation of Tribrid instrumentsthe Orbitrap Eclipse. The updated architecture of the Orbitrap Ascend includes a second ion-routing multipole (IRM) in front of the redesigned C-trap/Orbitrap and a new ion funnel that allows gentler ion introduction, among other changes. These modifications in Ascend hardware configuration enabled an increase in parallelizable ion injection time during higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD) Orbitrap tandem MS (FTMS2) analysis of ∼5 ms. This enhancement was particularly valuable in the analyses of limited sample amounts, where improvements in sensitivity resulted in up to 140% increase in the number of identified tryptic peptides. Further, analysis of phosphorylated peptides enriched from the K562 human cell line yielded up to ∼50% increase in the number of unique phosphopeptides and localized phosphosites. Strikingly, we also observed a ∼2-fold boost in the number of detected N-glycopeptides, likely owing to the improvements in ion transmission and sensitivity. In addition, we performed the multiplexed quantitative proteomics analyses of TMT11-plex labeled HEK293T tryptic peptides and observed 9–14% increase in the number of quantified peptides. In conclusion, the Orbitrap Ascend consistently outperformed its predecessor the Orbitrap Eclipse in various bottom-up proteomic analyses, and we anticipate that it will generate reproducible and in-depth datasets for numerous proteomic applications

    Comprehensive Single-Shot Proteomics with FAIMS on a Hybrid Orbitrap Mass Spectrometer

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    Liquid chromatography (LC) prefractionation is often implemented to increase proteomic coverage; however, while effective, this approach is laborious, requires considerable sample amount, and can be cumbersome. We describe how interfacing a recently described high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) device between a nanoelectrospray ionization (nanoESI) emitter and an Orbitrap hybrid mass spectrometer (MS) enables the collection of single-shot proteomic data with comparable depth to that of conventional two-dimensional LC approaches. This next generation FAIMS device incorporates improved ion sampling at the ESI–FAIMS interface, increased electric field strength, and a helium-free ion transport gas. With fast internal compensation voltage (CV) stepping (25 ms/transition), multiple unique gas-phase fractions may be analyzed simultaneously over the course of an MS analysis. We have comprehensively demonstrated how this device performs for bottom-up proteomics experiments as well as characterized the effects of peptide charge state, mass loading, analysis time, and additional variables. We also offer recommendations for the number of CVs and which CVs to use for different lengths of experiments. Internal CV stepping experiments increase protein identifications from a single-shot experiment to >8000, from over 100 000 peptide identifications in as little as 5 h. In single-shot 4 h label-free quantitation (LFQ) experiments of a human cell line, we quantified 7818 proteins with FAIMS using intra-analysis CV switching compared to 6809 without FAIMS. Single-shot FAIMS results also compare favorably with LC fractionation experiments. A 6 h single-shot FAIMS experiment generates 8007 protein identifications, while four fractions analyzed for 1.5 h each produce 7776 protein identifications
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