2 research outputs found

    Recommendations for reporting ion mobility mass spectrometry measurements

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    © 2019 The Authors. Mass Spectrometry Reviews Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Here we present a guide to ion mobility mass spectrometry experiments, which covers both linear and nonlinear methods: what is measured, how the measurements are done, and how to report the results, including the uncertainties of mobility and collision cross section values. The guide aims to clarify some possibly confusing concepts, and the reporting recommendations should help researchers, authors and reviewers to contribute comprehensive reports, so that the ion mobility data can be reused more confidently. Starting from the concept of the definition of the measurand, we emphasize that (i) mobility values (K0) depend intrinsically on ion structure, the nature of the bath gas, temperature, and E/N; (ii) ion mobility does not measure molecular surfaces directly, but collision cross section (CCS) values are derived from mobility values using a physical model; (iii) methods relying on calibration are empirical (and thus may provide method-dependent results) only if the gas nature, temperature or E/N cannot match those of the primary method. Our analysis highlights the urgency of a community effort toward establishing primary standards and reference materials for ion mobility, and provides recommendations to do so. © 2019 The Authors. Mass Spectrometry Reviews Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc

    Structural Stability from Solution to the Gas Phase: Native Solution Structure of Ubiquitin Survives Analysis in a Solvent-Free Ion Mobility–Mass Spectrometry Environment

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    The conformations of desolvated ubiquitin ions, lifted into the gas phase by electrospray ionization (ESI), were characterized by ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) and compared to the solution structures they originated from. The IMS instrument combining a two-meter helium drift tube with a quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer was built in-house. Solutions stabilizing the native state of ubiquitin yielded essentially one family of tightly folded desolvated ubiquitin structures with a cross section matching the size of the native state (1000 Å<sup>2</sup>). Solutions favoring the <i>A</i> state yielded several well-defined families of significantly unfolded conformations (1800–2000 Å<sup>2</sup>) matching in size conformations between the <i>A</i> state and a fully unfolded state. On the basis of these results and a wealth of data available in the literature, we conclude that the native state of ubiquitin is preserved in the transition from solution to the desolvated state during the ESI process and survives for >100 ms in a 294 K solvent-free environment. The <i>A</i> state, however, is charged more extensively than the native state during ESI and decays more rapidly following ESI. <i>A</i> state ions unfold on a time scale equal to or shorter than the experiment (≤50 ms) to more extended structures
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