4.8 Article

Rapid separation and quantitative analysis of peptides using a new nanoelectrospray-differential mobility spectrometer-mass spectrometer system

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 78, Issue 15, Pages 5443-5452

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac060003f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [1R01CA69390] Funding Source: Medline

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Differential mobility spectrometry (DMS) ( see Buryakov, I. A.; Krylov, E. V.; Nazarov, E. G.; Rasulev, U. Kh. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. Ion Processes 1993, 128, 143148), also commonly referred to as high-field asymmetric waveform ion mobility spectrometry (FAIMS) ( see Purves, R. W.; Guevremont, R.; Day, S.; Pipich, C. W.; Matyjaszcyk, M. S. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 1998, 69, 4094-4105), is a rapidly advancing technology for gas-phase ion separation. The interfacing of DMS with mass spectrometry ( MS) offers potential advantages over the use of mass spectrometry alone. Such advantages include improvements to mass spectral signal-to-noise, orthogonal/ complementary ion separation to mass spectrometry, enhanced ion and complexation structural analysis, and the potential for rapid analyte quantitation. In this report, we investigate the use of our nanoESI-DMS-MS system to demonstrate differential mobility separation of peptides. The formation of higher order peptide aggregate ions ( ion complexes) via electrospray ionization and the negative impact this has on DMS peptide separation are examined. The successful use of differential mobility drift gas modifiers (dopants) to reduce aggregate ion size and improve DMS peptide ion separation is presented. Following optimization of DMS peptide separation conditions, we examined next the feasibility of a new analytical platform which uses direct sample infusion with nanoESI-DMS-MS for ultrarapid analyte quantitation. Quantitation of a selected peptide from a semicomplex peptide mixture is presented. Initial feasibility results with this new approach demonstrate good accuracy and reproducibility, as well as an absolute mass sensitivity of 6.8 amol and a minimum dynamic range of 2500 for the peptide of interest. This report offers a first look at utilizing nanoESI-DMS-MS to create an ultrarapid ( under 5 s) quantitative analysis platform and its potential in the high-throughput arena. Each ion separation technique, DMS and MS, offers orthogonal ion separation to one another, enhancing the overall specificity for this quantitative approach.

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