There is a growing demand for lower-cost, benchtop analytical
instruments
with complementary separation capabilities for the screening and characterization
of biological samples. In this study, we report on the custom integration
of trapped ion mobility spectrometry and ultraviolet photodissociation
capabilities in a commercial Paul quadrupolar ion trap multistage
mass spectrometer (TIMS-QIT-MSn UVPD platform). A gated
TIMS operation allowed for the accumulation of ion mobility separated
ion in the QIT, followed by a mass analysis (MS1 scan) or m/z isolation, followed by selected collision
induced dissociation (CID) or ultraviolet photodissociation (UVPD)
and a mass analysis (MS2 scan). The analytical potential of this platform
for the analysis of complex and labile biological samples is illustrated
for the case of positional isomers with varying PTM location of the
histone H4 tryptic peptide 4-17 singly and doubly acetylated and the
histone H3.1 tail (1-50) singly trimethylated. For all cases, a baseline
ion mobility precursor molecular ion preseparation was obtained. The
tandem CID and UVPD MS2 allowed for effective sequence confirmation
as well as the identification of reporter fragment ions associated
with the PTM location; a higher sequence coverage was obtained using
UVPD when compared to CID. Different from previous IMS-MS implementation,
the novel TIMS-QIT-MSn UVPD platform offers a lower-cost
alternative for the structural characterization of biological molecules
that can be widely disseminated in clinical laboratories