4.8 Article

Online Ozonolysis Combined with Ion Mobility-Mass Spectrometry Provides a New Platform for Lipid Isomer Analyses

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 90, Issue 2, Pages 1292-1300

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b04091

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council Discovery Program [DP150101715]
  2. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the NIH [R01ES022190]
  3. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  4. DOE [DE-AC05-76RL0 1830]

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One of the most significant challenges in contemporary lipidomics lies in the separation and identification of lipid isomers that differ only in site(s) of unsaturation or geometric configuration of the carbon-carbon double bonds. While analytical separation techniques including ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) and liquid chromatography (LC) can separate isomeric lipids under appropriate conditions, conventional tandem mass spectrometry cannot provide unequivocal identification. To address this challenge, we have implemented ozone-induced dissociation (OzID) in-line with LC, IMS, and high resolution mass spectrometry. Modification of an IMS-capable quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer was undertaken to allow the introduction of ozone into the high-pressure trapping ion funnel region preceding the IMS cell. This enabled the novel LC-OzID-IMS-MS configuration where ozonolysis of ionized lipids occurred rapidly (10 ms) without prior mass-selection. LC-elution time alignment combined with accurate mass and arrival time extraction of ozonolysis products facilitated correlation of precursor and product ions without mass-selection (and associated reductions in duty cycle). Unsaturated lipids across 11 classes were examined using this workflow in both positive and negative ion modalities, and in all cases, the positions of carbon-carbon double bonds were unequivocally assigned based on predictable OzID transitions. Under these conditions, geometric isomers exhibited different IMS arrival time distributions and distinct OzID product ion ratios providing a means for discrimination of cis/trans double bonds in complex lipids. The combination of OzID with multidimensional separations shows significant promise for facile profiling of unsaturation patterns within complex lipidomes including human plasma.

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