4.5 Article

Separation and Classification of Lipids Using Differential Ion Mobility Spectrometry

Journal

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13361-011-0114-z

Keywords

Ion mobility spectrometry (IMS); Differential IMS (FAIMS); Lipid analyses; Isomer separation

Funding

  1. NIH NCRR [RR 18522]
  2. NIH [DK071283]
  3. NIAID [U54AI081680]
  4. US DoE OBER

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Correlations between the dimensions of a 2-D separation create trend lines that depend on structural or chemical characteristics of the compound class and thus facilitate classification of unknowns. This broadly applies to conventional ion mobility spectrometry (IMS)/mass spectrometry (MS), where the major biomolecular classes (e.g., lipids, peptides, nucleotides) occupy different trend line domains. However, strong correlation between the IMS and MS separations for ions of same charge has impeded finer distinctions. Differential IMS (or FAIMS) is generally less correlated to MS and thus could separate those domains better. We report the first observation of chemical class separation by trend lines using FAIMS, here for lipids. For lipids, FAIMS is indeed more independent of MS than conventional IMS, and subclasses (such as phospho-, glycero-, or sphingolipids) form distinct, often non-overlapping domains. Even finer categories with different functional groups or degrees of unsaturation are often separated. As expected, resolution improves in He-rich gases: at 70% He, glycerolipid isomers with different fatty acid positions can be resolved. These results open the door for application of FAIMS to lipids, particularly in shotgun lipidomics and targeted analyses of bioactive lipids.

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