8 research outputs found
Advancement of Atmospheric-Vacuum Interfaces for Mass Spectrometers with a Focus on Increasing Gas Throughput for Improving Sensitivity
Ion
sampling from an electrospray ionization (ESI) source was improved
by increasing gas conductance of the MS inlet by 4.3-fold. Converting
the gas throughput (<i>Q</i>) into sensitivity improvement
was dependent on ion desolvation and handling of the gas load. Desolvation
was addressed by using a novel slot shaped inlet that exhibited desolvation
properties identical to the 0.58 mm i.d capillary. An assay tailored
for “small molecules” at high chromatographic flow rate
(500 μL/min) yielded a compound dependent 6.5 to 14-fold signal
gain while analysis at nano chromatographic flow rate (300 nL/min)
showed 2 to 3.5-fold improvement for doubly charged peptides. Improvement
exceeding the <i>Q</i> (4.3-fold) at high chromatographic
flow rate was explained by superior sampling of the spatially dispersed
ion spray when using the slot shaped capillary. Sensitivity improvement
across a wide range of chromatographic flow rate confirmed no compromise
in ion desolvation with the increase in <i>Q</i>. Another
improvement included less overflow of gas into the mass analyzer from
the foreline region owing to the slot shape of the capillary. By doubling
the roughing pump capacity and operating the electrodynamic ion funnel
(EDIF) at ∼4 Torr, a single pumping stage was sufficient to
handle the gas load. The transport of solvent clusters from the LC
effluent into the mass analyzer was prevented by a “wavy shaped”
transfer quadrupole and was compared with a benchmark approach that
delivered ions orthogonally into a differentially pumped dual EDIF
at comparable gas <i>Q</i>
Targeted Mass Spectrometry Analyses of Somatic Mutations in Colorectal Cancer Specimens Using Differential Ion Mobility
Identification
of K-Ras and B-Raf mutations in colorectal cancer
(CRC) is essential to predict patients’ response to anti-EGFR
therapy and formulate appropriate therapeutic strategies to improve
prognosis and survival. Here, we combined parallel reaction monitoring
(PRM) with high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility (FAIMS) to
enhance mass spectrometry sensitivity and improve the identification
of low-abundance K-Ras and B-Raf mutations in biological samples without
immunoaffinity enrichment. In targeted LC-MS/MS analyses, FAIMS reduced
the occurrence of interfering ions and enhanced precursor ion purity,
resulting in a 3-fold improvement in the detection limit for K-Ras
and B-Raf mutated peptides. In addition, the ion mobility separation
of isomeric peptides using FAIMS facilitated the unambiguous identification
of K-Ras G12D and G13D peptides. The application of targeted LC-MS/MS
analyses using FAIMS is demonstrated for the detection and quantitation
of B-Raf V600E, K-Ras G12D, G13D, and G12V in CRC cell lines and primary
specimens
Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry and High-Field Asymmetric Waveform Ion Mobility Spectrometry (FAIMS) Enable the in-Depth Analysis of Human Serum Proteoforms
Blood serum and plasma
are arguably the most commonly analyzed
clinical samples, with dozens of proteins serving as validated biomarkers
for various human diseases. Top-down proteomics may provide additional
insights into disease etiopathogenesis since this approach focuses
on protein forms, or proteoforms, originally circulating in blood,
potentially providing access to information about relevant post-translational
modifications, truncations, single amino acid substitutions, and many
other sources of protein variation. However, the vast majority of
proteomic studies on serum and plasma are carried out using peptide-centric,
bottom-up approaches that cannot recapitulate the original proteoform
content of samples. Clinical laboratories have been slow to adopt
top-down analysis, also due to higher sample handling requirements.
In this study, we describe a straightforward protocol for intact proteoform
sample preparation based on the depletion of albumin and immunoglobulins,
followed by simplified protein fractionation via polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis. After molecular weight-based fractionation, we supplemented
the traditional liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry
(LC-MS2) data acquisition with high-field asymmetric waveform
ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) to further simplify serum proteoform
mixtures. This LC-FAIMS-MS2 method led to the identification
of over 1000 serum proteoforms < 30 kDa, outperforming traditional
LC-MS2 data acquisition and more than doubling the number
of proteoforms identified in previous studies
Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry and High-Field Asymmetric Waveform Ion Mobility Spectrometry (FAIMS) Enable the in-Depth Analysis of Human Serum Proteoforms
Blood serum and plasma
are arguably the most commonly analyzed
clinical samples, with dozens of proteins serving as validated biomarkers
for various human diseases. Top-down proteomics may provide additional
insights into disease etiopathogenesis since this approach focuses
on protein forms, or proteoforms, originally circulating in blood,
potentially providing access to information about relevant post-translational
modifications, truncations, single amino acid substitutions, and many
other sources of protein variation. However, the vast majority of
proteomic studies on serum and plasma are carried out using peptide-centric,
bottom-up approaches that cannot recapitulate the original proteoform
content of samples. Clinical laboratories have been slow to adopt
top-down analysis, also due to higher sample handling requirements.
In this study, we describe a straightforward protocol for intact proteoform
sample preparation based on the depletion of albumin and immunoglobulins,
followed by simplified protein fractionation via polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis. After molecular weight-based fractionation, we supplemented
the traditional liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry
(LC-MS2) data acquisition with high-field asymmetric waveform
ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) to further simplify serum proteoform
mixtures. This LC-FAIMS-MS2 method led to the identification
of over 1000 serum proteoforms < 30 kDa, outperforming traditional
LC-MS2 data acquisition and more than doubling the number
of proteoforms identified in previous studies
Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry and High-Field Asymmetric Waveform Ion Mobility Spectrometry (FAIMS) Enable the in-Depth Analysis of Human Serum Proteoforms
Blood serum and plasma
are arguably the most commonly analyzed
clinical samples, with dozens of proteins serving as validated biomarkers
for various human diseases. Top-down proteomics may provide additional
insights into disease etiopathogenesis since this approach focuses
on protein forms, or proteoforms, originally circulating in blood,
potentially providing access to information about relevant post-translational
modifications, truncations, single amino acid substitutions, and many
other sources of protein variation. However, the vast majority of
proteomic studies on serum and plasma are carried out using peptide-centric,
bottom-up approaches that cannot recapitulate the original proteoform
content of samples. Clinical laboratories have been slow to adopt
top-down analysis, also due to higher sample handling requirements.
In this study, we describe a straightforward protocol for intact proteoform
sample preparation based on the depletion of albumin and immunoglobulins,
followed by simplified protein fractionation via polyacrylamide gel
electrophoresis. After molecular weight-based fractionation, we supplemented
the traditional liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry
(LC-MS2) data acquisition with high-field asymmetric waveform
ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) to further simplify serum proteoform
mixtures. This LC-FAIMS-MS2 method led to the identification
of over 1000 serum proteoforms < 30 kDa, outperforming traditional
LC-MS2 data acquisition and more than doubling the number
of proteoforms identified in previous studies
Characterization and Optimization of Multiplexed Quantitative Analyses Using High-Field Asymmetric-Waveform Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry
Multiplexed,
isobaric tagging methods are powerful techniques to
increase throughput, precision, and accuracy in quantitative proteomics.
The dynamic range and accuracy of quantitation, however, can be limited
by coisolation of tag-containing peptides that release reporter ions
and conflate quantitative measurements across precursors. Methods
to alleviate these effects often lead to the loss of protein and peptide
identifications through online or offline filtering of interference
containing spectra. To alleviate this effect, high-Field Asymmetric-waveform
Ion Mobility Spectroscopy (FAIMS) has been proposed as a method to
reduce precursor coisolation and improve the accuracy and dynamic
range of multiplex quantitation. Here we tested the use of FAIMS to
improve quantitative accuracy using previously established TMT-based
interference standards (triple-knockout [TKO] and Human-Yeast Proteomics Resource [HYPER]). We observed
that FAIMS robustly improved the quantitative accuracy of both high-resolution
MS2 (HRMS2) and synchronous precursor selection
MS3 (SPS-MS3)-based methods without sacrificing
protein identifications. We further optimized and characterized the
main factors that enable robust use of FAIMS for multiplexed quantitation.
We highlight these factors and provide method recommendations to take
advantage of FAIMS technology to improve isobaric-tag-quantification
moving forward
Comprehensive Single-Shot Proteomics with FAIMS on a Hybrid Orbitrap Mass Spectrometer
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
Characterization and Optimization of Multiplexed Quantitative Analyses Using High-Field Asymmetric-Waveform Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry
Multiplexed,
isobaric tagging methods are powerful techniques to
increase throughput, precision, and accuracy in quantitative proteomics.
The dynamic range and accuracy of quantitation, however, can be limited
by coisolation of tag-containing peptides that release reporter ions
and conflate quantitative measurements across precursors. Methods
to alleviate these effects often lead to the loss of protein and peptide
identifications through online or offline filtering of interference
containing spectra. To alleviate this effect, high-Field Asymmetric-waveform
Ion Mobility Spectroscopy (FAIMS) has been proposed as a method to
reduce precursor coisolation and improve the accuracy and dynamic
range of multiplex quantitation. Here we tested the use of FAIMS to
improve quantitative accuracy using previously established TMT-based
interference standards (triple-knockout [TKO] and Human-Yeast Proteomics Resource [HYPER]). We observed
that FAIMS robustly improved the quantitative accuracy of both high-resolution
MS2 (HRMS2) and synchronous precursor selection
MS3 (SPS-MS3)-based methods without sacrificing
protein identifications. We further optimized and characterized the
main factors that enable robust use of FAIMS for multiplexed quantitation.
We highlight these factors and provide method recommendations to take
advantage of FAIMS technology to improve isobaric-tag-quantification
moving forward
