4.7 Article

Trapped Ion Mobility Spectrometry and Parallel Accumulation-Serial Fragmentation in Proteomics

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MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
卷 20, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mcpro.2021.100138

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  1. Max-Planck Society for the Advancement of Science
  2. German Research Foundation (DFG-Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize) [MA1764/2-1]
  3. Federal Ministry of Education and Research
  4. Thuringian Ministry for Economic Affairs, Science and a Digital Society through the Joint Federal Government-Lander Tenure-Track Programme

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The recent development of TIMS coupled to TOF mass analysis, particularly the PASEF operation mode, offers advantages in sequencing speed and sensitivity. By synchronizing ion release with downstream precursor selection, PASEF can increase the number of peptide fragment ion spectra obtained while maintaining sensitivity. The correlation between ion mobility and mass, as well as the ability to predict collisional cross section values based on peptide sequences, make TIMS quadrupole TOF PASEF a powerful platform for proteomics and beyond.
Recent advances in efficiency and ease of implementation have rekindled interest in ion mobility spectrometry, a technique that separates gas phase ions by their size and shape and that can be hybridized with conventional LC and MS. Here, we review the recent development of trapped ion mobility spectrometry (TIMS) coupled to TOF mass analysis. In particular, the parallel accumulation-serial fragmentation (PASEF) operation mode offers unique advantages in terms of sequencing speed and sensitivity. Its defining feature is that it synchronizes the release of ions from the TIMS device with the downstream selection of precursors for fragmentation in a TIMS quadrupole TOF configuration. As ions are compressed into narrow ion mobility peaks, the number of peptide fragment ion spectra obtained in data-dependent or targeted analyses can be increased by an order of magnitude without compromising sensitivity. Taking advantage of the correlation between ion mobility and mass, the PASEF principle also multiplies the efficiency of data-independent acquisition. This makes the technology well suited for rapid proteome profiling, an increasingly important attribute in clinical proteomics, as well as for ultrasensitive measurements down to single cells. The speed and accuracy of TIMS and PASEF also enable precise measurements of collisional cross section values at the scale of more than a million data points and the development of neural networks capable of predicting them based only on peptide sequences. Peptide collisional cross section values can differ for isobaric sequences or positional isomers of post-translational modifications. This additional information may be leveraged in real time to direct data acquisition or in postprocessing to increase confidence in peptide identifications. These developments make TIMS quadrupole TOF PASEF a powerful and expandable platform for proteomics and beyond.

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