4.8 Article

Evaluation of Collision Cross Section Calibrants for Structural Analysis of Lipids by Traveling Wave Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 88, Issue 14, Pages 7329-7336

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.6b01728

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R00 HD073270]
  2. Department of Medicinal Chemistry, School of Pharmacy of the University of Washington
  3. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [5UH3TR000491-04, 3UH3TR000491-04S1]
  4. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [R01GM92218]
  5. Vanderbilt Institute for Chemical Biology
  6. Vanderbilt University College of Arts and Sciences

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Collision cross section (CCS) measurement of lipids using traveling wave ion mobility-mass spectrometry (TWIM-MS) is of high interest to the lipidomics field. However, currently available calibrants for CCS measurement using TWIM are predominantly peptides that display quite different physical properties and gas-phase conformations from lipids, which could lead to large CCS calibration errors for lipids. Here we report the direct CCS measurement of a series of phosphatidylcholines (PCs) and phosphatidylethanolamines (PEs) in nitrogen using a drift tube ion mobility (DTIM) instrument and an evaluation of the accuracy and reproducibility of PCs and PEs as CCS calibrants for phospholipids against different classes of calibrants, including polyalanine (PolyAla), tetraalkylammonium salts (TAA), and hexakis(fluoroalkoxy)phosphazines (HFAP), in both positive and negative modes in TWIM-MS analysis. We demonstrate that structurally mismatched calibrants lead to larger errors in calibrated CCS values while the structurally matched calibrants, PCs and PEs, gave highly accurate and reproducible CCS values at different traveling wave parameters. Using the lipid calibrants, the majority of the CCS values of several classes of phospholipids measured by TWIM are within 2% error of the CCS values measured by DTIM. The development of phospholipid CCS calibrants will enable high accuracy structural studies of lipids and add an additional level of validation in the assignment of identifications in untargeted lipidomics experiments.

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