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Combining Field-Enabled Capillary Vibrating Sharp-Edge Spray Ionization with Microflow Liquid Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry to Enhance ‘Omics Analyses

Sandra Majuta, Anthony DeBastiani, Peng Li, Stephen J. Valentine

2021Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Field-enabled capillary vibrating sharp-edge spray ionization (cVSSI) has been combined with high-flow liquid chromatography (LC) and mass spectrometry (MS) to establish current ionization capabilities for metabolomics and proteomics investigations. Comparisons are made between experiments employing cVSSI and a heated electrospray ionization probe representing the state-of-the-art in microflow LC-MS methods for ‘omics studies. For metabolomics standards, cVSSI is shown to provide an ionization enhancement by factors of 4 ± 2 for both negative and positive ion mode analyses. For chymotryptic peptides, cVSSI is shown to provide an ionization enhancement by factors of 5 ± 2 and 2 ± 1 for negative and positive ion mode analyses, respectively. Slightly broader high-performance liquid chromatography peaks are observed in the cVSSI datasets, and several studies suggest that this results from a slightly decreased post-split flow rate. This may result from partial obstruction of the pulled-tip emitter over time. Such a challenge can be remedied with the use of LC pumps that operate in the 10 to 100 μL·min–1 flow regime. At this early stage, the proof-of-principle studies already show ion signal advantages over state-of-the-art electrospray ionization (ESI) for a wide variety of analytes in both positive and negative ion mode. Overall, this represents a ∼20–50-fold improvement over the first demonstration of LC-MS analyses by voltage-free cVSSI. Separate comparisons of the ion abundances of compounds eluting under identical solvent conditions reveal ionization efficiency differences between cVSSI and ESI and may suggest varied contributions to ionization from different physicochemical properties of the compounds. Future investigations of parameters that could further increase ionization gains in negative and positive ion mode analyses with the use of cVSSI are briefly presented.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryElectrospray ionizationMass spectrometryIonizationChromatographyAnalytical Chemistry (journal)MetabolomicsDirect electron ionization liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry interfaceIon suppression in liquid chromatography–mass spectrometryCapillary electrophoresis–mass spectrometryCapillary actionIonElectrosprayAmbient ionizationLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometryChemical ionizationMaterials scienceOrganic chemistryComposite materialAnalytical Chemistry and ChromatographyMass Spectrometry Techniques and ApplicationsMicrofluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
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