14 research outputs found

    PARAMETRIC CORRECTION OF HERMETIC ELECTROMECHANICAL CONVERTER CONTROL SYSTEM

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    The article presents the method of control system regulator synthesis, considering peculiarities of hermetic electromechanical converters. The purpose of the study is to estimate the parametric correction conceptions, admitting to embed hermetic electromechanical converters in existing control system

    Improved functionalization of oleic acid-coated iron oxide nanoparticles for biomedical applications

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    Superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles can providemultiple benefits for biomedical applications in aqueous environments such asmagnetic separation or magnetic resonance imaging. To increase the colloidal stability and allow subsequent reactions, the introduction of hydrophilic functional groups onto the particles’ surface is essential. During this process, the original coating is exchanged by preferably covalently bonded ligands such as trialkoxysilanes. The duration of the silane exchange reaction, which commonly takes more than 24 h, is an important drawback for this approach. In this paper, we present a novel method, which introduces ultrasonication as an energy source to dramatically accelerate this process, resulting in high-quality waterdispersible nanoparticles around 10 nmin size. To prove the generic character, different functional groups were introduced on the surface including polyethylene glycol chains, carboxylic acid, amine, and thiol groups. Their colloidal stability in various aqueous buffer solutions as well as human plasma and serum was investigated to allow implementation in biomedical and sensing applications.status: publishe

    The 3D OrbiSIMS—label-free metabolic imaging with subcellular lateral resolution and high mass-resolving power

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    We report the development of a 3D OrbiSIMS instrument for label-free biomedical imaging. It combines the high spatial resolution of secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS; under 200 nm for inorganic species and under 2 μm for biomolecules) with the high mass-resolving power of an Orbitrap (>240,000 at m/z 200). This allows exogenous and endogenous metabolites to be visualized in 3D with subcellular resolution. We imaged the distribution of neurotransmitters—gamma-aminobutyric acid, dopamine and serotonin—with high spectroscopic confidence in the mouse hippocampus. We also putatively annotated and mapped the subcellular localization of 29 sulfoglycosphingolipids and 45 glycerophospholipids, and we confirmed lipid identities with tandem mass spectrometry. We demonstrated single-cell metabolomic profiling using rat alveolar macrophage cells incubated with different concentrations of the drug amiodarone, and we observed that the upregulation of phospholipid species and cholesterol is correlated with the accumulation of amiodarone

    A Conjoined Rectilinear Collision Cell and Pulsed Extraction Ion Trap with Auxiliary DC Electrodes.

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    Ion traps are routinely directly coupled to mass analyzers, where they serve to suitably cool and shape an ion population prior to pulsed extraction into the analyzer proper. Such devices benefit from high duty cycle and transmission but suffer slow ion processing times caused by compromise in the buffer gas pressure range that suitably dampens injected ion kinetic energy, without causing excessive scatter during extraction or within the analyzer. A rectilinear RF quadrupole ion trap has been characterized, conjoining a pressurized collision region with a pumped extraction region, and an unbroken RF interface for seamless ion transfer between them. Auxiliary electrodes mounted between the RF electrodes provide DC voltage gradients that serve to both guide ions through the device and position them at the extraction slot. The influence of the auxiliary DC upon the trapping RF field was measured, and suitable parameters defined. A mode of operation was developed that allowed parallel processing of ions in both regions, enabling a repetition rate of 200Hz when the device was coupled to a high-resolution accurate-mass analyzer

    Phase-Constrained Spectrum Deconvolution for Fourier Transform Mass Spectrometry

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    This Article introduces a new computationally efficient noise-tolerant signal processing method, referred to as phased spectrum deconvolution method (ΦSDM), designed for Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FT MS). ΦSDM produces interference-free mass spectra with resolution beyond the Fourier transform (FT) uncertainty limit. With a presumption that the oscillation phases are preserved, the method deconvolves an observed FT spectrum into a distribution of harmonic components bound to a fixed frequency grid, which is several times finer than that of FT. The approach shows stability under noisy conditions, and the noise levels in the resulting spectra are lower than those of the original FT spectra. Although requiring more computational power than standard FT algorithms, ΦSDM runs in a quasilinear time. The method was tested on both synthetic and experimental data, and consistently demonstrated performance superior to the FT-based methodologies, be it across the entire mass range or on a selected mass window of interest. ΦSDM promises substantial improvements in the spectral quality and the speed of FT MS instruments. It might also be beneficial for other spectroscopy approaches which require harmonic analysis for data processing

    Expanding Orbitrap collision cross section measurements to native protein applications through kinetic energy and signal decay analysis

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    The measurement of collision cross sections (CCS) offers supplemental information about sizes and conformations of ions beyond mass analysis alone. We have previously shown that CCSs can be determined directly from the time-domain transient decay of ions in an Orbitrap mass analyzer as ions oscillate around the central electrode and collide with neutral gas, thus removing them from the ion packet. Herein, we develop the soft sphere collision model, thus deviating from prior FT-MS CCS hard sphere model, to determine CCSs as a function of center-of-mass collision energy in the Orbitrap analyzer. With this model, we aim to increase the upper mass limit of CCS measurement for native-like proteins, characterized by low charge states and presumed to be in more compact conformations. We also combine CCS measurements with collision inducing unfolding and MS/MS experiments to monitor protein unfolding and disassembly of protein complexes and measure CCSs of ejected monomers from protein complexes

    Determination of Collision Cross-Sections of Protein Ions in an Orbitrap Mass Analyzer

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    We demonstrate a method for determining the collision cross-sections (CCSs) of protein ions based on the decay rate of the time-domain transient signal from an Orbitrap mass analyzer. Multiply charged ions of ubiquitin, cytochrome <i>c</i>, and myoglobin were generated by electrospray ionization of both denaturing solutions and ones with high salt content to preserve native-like structures. A linear relationship between the pressure in the Orbitrap analyzer and the transient decay rate was established and used to demonstrate that the signal decay is primarily due to ion-neutral collisions for protein ions across the entire working pressure range of the instrument. The CCSs measured in this study were compared with previously published CCS values measured by ion mobility mass spectrometry (IMS), and results from the two methods were found to differ by less than 7% for all charge states known to adopt single gas-phase conformations

    Limits for resolving isobaric tandem mass tag reporter ions using phase constrained spectrum deconvolution

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    A popular method for peptide quantification relies on isobaric labeling such as tandem mass tags (TMT), which enables multiplexed proteome analyses. Quantification is achieved by reporter ions generated by fragmentation in a tandem mass spectrometer. However, with higher degrees of multiplexing, the smaller mass differences between the reporter ions increase the mass resolving power requirements. This contrasts with faster peptide sequencing capabilities enabled by lowered mass resolution on Orbitrap instruments. It is therefore important to determine the mass resolution limits for highly multiplexed quantification when maximizing proteome depth. Here, we defined the lower boundaries for resolving TMT reporter ions with 0.0063 Da mass differences using an ultra-high-field Orbitrap mass spectrometer. We found the optimal method depends on the relative ratio between closely spaced reporter ions and that 64 ms transient acquisition time provided sufficient resolving power for separating TMT reporter ions with absolute ratio changes up to 16-fold. Furthermore, a 32 ms transient processed with phase-constrained spectrum deconvolution provides >50% more identifications with >99% quantified but with a slight loss in quantification precision and accuracy. These findings should guide decisions on what Orbitrap resolution settings to use in future proteomics experiments, relying on isobaric TMT reporter ion quantification

    Defining the stoichiometry and cargo load of viral and bacterial nanoparticles by Orbitrap mass spectrometry

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    Accurate mass analysis can provide useful information on the stoichiometry and composition of protein-based particles, such as virus-like assemblies. For applications in nanotechnology and medicine, such nanoparticles are loaded with foreign cargos, making accurate mass information essential to define the cargo load. Here, we describe modifications to an Orbitrap mass spectrometer that enable high mass analysis of several virus-like nanoparticles up to 4.5 MDa in mass. This allows the accurate determination of the composition of virus-like particles. The modified instrument is utilized to determine the cargo load of bacterial encapsulin nanoparticles that were engineered to encapsulate foreign cargo proteins. We find that encapsulin packages from 8 up to 12 cargo proteins, thereby quantifying cargo load but also showing the ensemble spread. In addition, we determined the previously unknown stoichiometry of the three different splice variants of the capsid protein in adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsids, showing that symmetry is broken and assembly is heterogeneous and stochastic. These results demonstrate the potential of high-resolution mass analysis of protein-based nanoparticles, with widespread applications in chemical biology and nanotechnology
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