Determination of Optimal Electrospray Parameters for
Lipidomics in Infrared-Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Electrospray
Ionization Mass Spectrometry Imaging
Infrared
matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (IR-MALDESI)
is an ambient mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) technique that relies
on electrospray ionization (ESI) for ion generation of desorbed neutrals.
Although many mechanisms in IR-MALDESI have been studied in depth,
there has not yet been a comprehensive study of how the ESI parameters
change the profiles of tissue specific lipids. Acetonitrile (ACN)/water
and methanol (MeOH)/water solvent systems and compositions were varied
across a series of applied ESI voltages during IR-MALDESI analysis
of rat liver tissue. Gradients of 12 min were run from 5 to 95% organic
solvent in both positive and negative polarities across 11 voltages
between 2.25 and 4.5 kV. These experiments informed longer gradients
(25–30 min) across shorter solvent gradient ranges with fewer
voltages. Optimal ESI parameters for lipidomics were determined by
the number and abundance of detected lipids and the relative proportion
of background ions. In positive polarity, the best solvent composition
was 60–75% ACN/40–25% H2O with 0.2% formic
acid at 3.2 kV applied voltage. The best parameters for negative polarity
analysis are 45–55% ACN/55–45% H2O with 1
mM of acetic acid for voltages between 2.25 and 3.2 kV. Using these
defined parameters, IR-MALDESI positive polarity lipidomics studies
can increase lipid abundances 3-fold, with 15% greater coverage, while
an abundance increase of 1.5-fold and 10% more coverage can be achieved
relative to commonly used parameters in negative polarity