1 research outputs found
Energy Resolved Mass Spectrometry for Interoperable Non-resonant Collisional Spectra in Metabolomics
In untargeted metabolomics, the unambiguous identification
of metabolites
remains a major challenge. This requires high-quality spectral libraries
for reliable metabolite identification, which is essential for translating
metabolomics data into meaningful biological information. Several
attempts have been made to generate reproducible product ion spectra
(PIS) under a low collision energy (ELab) regime and nonresonant collisional conditions but have not fully
succeeded. We examined the ERMS (energy-resolved mass spectrometry)
breakdown curves of two lipo-amino acids and showed the possibility
to highlight “singular points”, called descriptors hereafter (linked to respective ELab depending on the instrument), for each of the monomodal product
ion profiles. Using several instruments based on different technologies,
the PIS recorded at these specific ELab sites shows remarkable similarities. The descriptors appeared as being independent of the fragmentation mechanisms and
can be used to overcome the main instrumental effects that limit the
interoperability of spectral libraries. This proof-of-concept study,
performed on two particular lipo-amino acids, demonstrates the high
potential of ERMS-derived information to determine the instrument-specific ELab at which PIS recorded in nonresonant conditions
become highly similar and instrument-independent, thus comparable
across platforms. This innovative but straightforward approach could
help remove some of the obstacles to metabolite identification in
nontargeted metabolomics, putting an end to a challenging chimera
