4.8 Article

FT-ICR Mass Spectrometry Imaging at Extreme Mass Resolving Power Using a Dynamically Harmonized ICR Cell with 1ω or 2ω Detection

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c00754

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This article introduces an analytical workflow based on MALDI mass spectrometry imaging, which restrains the pixel-to-pixel m/z shift by monitoring the total ion current and adjusting the laser parameters to maintain high spectral resolution and mass accuracy measurement. The optimized method has successfully performed high-quality MALDI MS imaging on instruments equipped with 7T and 9.4T superconducting magnets, and the results are compared favorably with experiments conducted on higher-magnetic-field superconducting magnets.
MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI MSI) is a powerful analytical method for achieving 2D localization of compounds from thin sections of typically but not exclusively biological samples. The dynamically harmonized ICR cell (ParaCell) was recently introduced to achieve extreme spectral resolution capable of providing the isotopic fine structure of ions detected in complex samples. The latest improvement in the ICR technology also includes 2 omega detection, which significantly reduces the transient time while preserving the nominal mass resolving power of the ICR cell. High-resolution MS images acquired on FT-ICR instruments equipped with 7T and 9.4T superconducting magnets and the dynamically harmonized ICR cell operating at suboptimal parameters suffered severely from the pixel-to-pixel shifting of m/z peaks due to space-charge effects. The resulting profile average mass spectra have depreciated mass measurement accuracy and mass resolving power under the instrument specifications that affect the confidence level of the identified ions. Here, we propose an analytical workflow based on the monitoring of the total ion current to restrain the pixel-to-pixel m/z shift. Adjustment of the laser parameters is proposed to maintain high spectral resolution and mass accuracy measurement within the instrument specifications during MSI analyses. The optimized method has been successfully employed in replicates to perform high-quality MALDI MS images at resolving power (FWHM) above 1,000,000 in the lipid mass range across the whole image for superconducting magnets of 7T and 9.4T using 1 and 2 omega detection. Our data also compare favorably with MALDI MSI experiments performed on higher-magnetic-field superconducting magnets, including the 21T MALDI FT-ICR prototype instrument of the NHMFL group at Tallahassee, Florida.

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