Journal
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 20, Issue 9, Pages 1759-1767Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jasms.2009.06.002
Keywords
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Funding
- Pfizer Inc
- University of Connecticut Foundation
- American Foundation for Pharmaceutical Education predoctoral fellowship
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Survival yield analysis is routinely used in mass spectroscopy as a tool for assessing precursor ion stability and internal energy. Because ion internal energy and decomposition reaction rates are dependent on chemical structure, we reasoned that survival yield curves should be compound-specific and therefore useful for chemical identification. In this study, a quantitative approach for analyzing the correlation between survival yield and collision energy was developed and validated. This method is based on determining the collision energy (CE) at which the survival yield is 50% (CE50) and, further, provides slope and intercept values for each survival yield curve. In initial experiments using a defined set of homologous compounds, we found that CE50 values were easily determined, quantitative, highly reproducible, and could discriminate between structural and even positional isomers. Further analysis demonstrated that CE50 values were independent of cone potential and orthogonal to compound mass. Experimentally determined CE50 values for a diverse set of 54 compounds were correlated to Molconn molecular structure descriptors. The resulting model yielded a statistically significant linear correlation between experimental and calculated CE50 values and identified several structural characteristics related to precursor ion stability and fragmentation mechanism. Thus, the CE50 is a promising method for compound identification and discrimination. (J Am Soc Mass Spectrom 2009, 20, 1759-1767) (C) 2009 American Society for Mass Spectrometry
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