4.8 Article

Implementation of ion/ion reactions in a quadrupole/time-of-flight tandem mass spectrometer

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 78, Issue 12, Pages 4146-4154

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac0606296

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [R01 GM045372, R01 GM045372-14, R37 GM045372, GM 45372] Funding Source: Medline

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A commercial quadrupole/time-of-flight (QqTOF) tandem mass spectrometer has been adapted for ion/ion reaction studies. To enable mutual storage of oppositely charged ions in a linear ion trap, the oscillating quadrupole field of the second quadrupole of the system (Q2) serves to store ions in the radial dimension while auxiliary radio frequency is superposed on the end lenses of Q2 during the reaction period to create barriers in the axial dimension. A pulsed dual electrospray (ESI) source is directly coupled to the instrument interface for the purpose of proton transfer reactions. Singly and doubly charged protein ions as high in mass as 66 kDa are readily formed and observed after proton-transfer reactions. For the modified instrument, the mass resolving power is similar to 8000 for a wide m/z range, and the mass accuracy is similar to 20 ppm for external calibration and similar to 5 ppm for internal calibration after ion/ion reactions. Parallel ion parking is demonstrated with a six-component protein mixture, which shows the potential application of reducing spectral complexity and concentrating certain charge states. The current system has high flexibility with respect to defining MSn experiments involving collision-induced dissociation (CID) and ion/ion reactions. Protein precursor and CID product masses can be determined with good accuracy, providing an attractive platform for top-down proteomics. Electron transfer dissociation ion/ion reactions are implemented by using a pulsed nano-ESI/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization dual source for ionization. The reaction between protonated peptide ions and radical anions of 1,3-dinitrobenzene formed exclusively c- and z-type fragment ions.

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