4.8 Article

Determination of Abundant Metabolite Matrix Adducts Illuminates the Dark Metabolome of MALDI-Mass Spectrometry Imaging Datasets

期刊

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
卷 93, 期 24, 页码 8399-8407

出版社

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c04720

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资金

  1. Betty and Gordon Moore Foundation [GBMF3811]
  2. Max Planck society

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Spatial metabolomics using mass spectrometry imaging is a powerful tool to map hundreds to thousands of metabolites in biological systems. However, annotation of m/z values is a major challenge in MSI, complicated by background ions introduced during experimental procedures. Adduct formation, particularly with sodium or potassium ions, significantly increases total m/z peak counts, and current data analyses often neglect matrix adducts, leading to an overestimation of metabolite numbers.
Spatial metabolomics using mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is a powerful tool to map hundreds to thousands of metabolites in biological systems. One major challenge in MSI is the annotation of m/z values, which is substantially complicated by background ions introduced throughout the chemicals and equipment used during experimental procedures. Among many factors, the formation of adducts with sodium or potassium ions, or in case of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI)-MSI, the presence of abundant matrix clusters strongly increases total m/z peak counts. Currently, there is a limitation to identify the chemistry of the many unknown peaks to interpret their biological function. We took advantage of the co-localization of adducts with their parent ions and the accuracy of high mass resolution to estimate adduct abundance in 20 datasets from different vendors of mass spectrometers. Metabolites ranging from lipids to amines and amino acids form matrix adducts with the commonly used 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) matrix like [M + (DHB-H2O) + H](+) and [M + DHB + Na](+). Current data analyses neglect those matrix adducts and overestimate total metabolite numbers, thereby expanding the number of unidentified peaks. Our study demonstrates that MALDI-MSI data are strongly influenced by adduct formation across different sample types and vendor platforms and reveals a major influence of so far unrecognized metabolite-matrix adducts on total peak counts (up to one third). We developed a software package, mass2adduct, for the community for an automated putative assignment and quantification of metabolite-matrix adducts enabling users to ultimately focus on the biologically relevant portion of the MSI data.

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