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Article
Atmospheric Pressure Drift Tube Ion Mobility-Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry: Initial Performance Characterization. Joel D Keelor, Stephen Zambrzycki, Anyin Li, Brian H Clowers, and Facundo M Fernandez Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b01866 • Publication Date (Web): 11 Oct 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 16, 2017
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Analytical Chemistry
1
Atmospheric Pressure Drift Tube Ion Mobility-Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry: Initial
2
Performance Characterization.
3 4
Joel D. Keelor1, Stephen Zambrzycki1, Anyin Li1, Brian H. Clowers2, and Facundo M.
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Fernández1
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1
8
30332, United States
9
2
10
School of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia
Department of Chemistry, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164, United
States
11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
*Corresponding
author.
Phone:
23
[email protected].
404-385-4432,
Fax:
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
404-385-3399.
E-mail:
Analytical Chemistry
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Abstract
2
Atmospheric pressure drift tube ion mobility spectrometry (AP-DTIMS) was coupled
3
with Fourier transform Orbitrap mass spectrometry. The performance capabilities of this
4
versatile new arrangement were demonstrated for different DTIMS ion gating operation modes
5
and Orbitrap mass spectrometer parameters in regard to sensitivity and resolving power.
6
Showcasing the optimized AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS system, isobaric peptide and sugar isomers
7
were successfully resolved and the identities of separated species validated by high-energy
8
collision dissociation (HCD) experiments.
9
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Analytical Chemistry
Introduction
2
Ion mobility (IM) spectrometry provides an additional analytical separation dimension
3
when combined with mass spectrometry (MS), as well as the ability for ion selection and
4
filtering based on “size-to-charge” ratios, ultimately enabling increases in instrument specificity,
5
peak capacity, and dynamic range. By expanding spectral coverage across two or more
6
dimensions (e.g. drift time and m/z), IM-MS analysis facilitates spectral interpretation by
7
lessening spectral congestion,1 with different compounds with distinct structural motifs – e.g.
8
lipids, carbohydrates, peptides, etc. – mapped to unique molecular trend lines.2 Data extracted
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from this type of multidimensional space has immensely enriched chemical classification and
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molecular identification in various “omics” research fields. Further expansion of the IM-MS
11
approach with time-nested liquid chromatography (LC)-IM-MS, or IM-IM-MS systems further
12
increases peak capacity, recovering more of the IM-MS dimensional space obscured by the
13
pseudo-orthogonal dependence between ion mobility (K) and m/z, and also removing ambiguity
14
in regions of CCS-m/z overlap.3, 4 Such nested IM-MS platforms are capable of providing greater
15
information density all the while reducing spectral complexity without a significant cost to
16
analysis time.
17
Currently, the most successful commercial implementations of IMS paired with MS
18
employ time-dispersive drift tube (DTIMS) or traveling wave (TWIMS) mobility techniques.
19
These particular techniques, for which ion-neutral collision cross-section (CCS) determination is
20
relatively straightforward, have proven exceptionally useful in the burgeoning fields of
21
proteomics, metabolomics, and structural MS. The majority of traveling wave or drift tube IM-
22
MS arrangements, best exemplified by the Waters Synapt G2-S or Agilent 6560 instruments,
23
respectively, feature mobility cells embedded within the MS system that are thereby restricted to
24
operation at reduced pressures by the vacuum constraints of the mass analyzer.2,
25
separations rely on ion/gas interactions that scale with pressure, and such reduced-pressure
26
configurations inevitably limit the achievable mobility resolving power as levels of ion diffusion
27
are more appreciable than at atmosphere. Ion trapping approaches, however, can partially or 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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All IMS
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completely offset this limitation. Enhancements to resolution and sensitivity have also been
2
made in reduced pressure systems by exploiting different gas polarizabilities,1,
3
additional electrodynamic RF field focusing to reduce diffusional broadening,7, 8 or electrostatic
4
lens implementations that can restore IMS operation at atmospheric pressure.9 In this pressure
5
regime, the resolving power of DTIMS is maximized as diffusion is reduced, yielding peak
6
capacities that may even surpass LC separation efficiencies.10,
7
atmospheric pressure operation is the assurance that the ion mobilities measured are from fully
8
thermalized ions interacting with a neutral gas under the low field limit.12, 13 However, very few
9
implementations of atmospheric pressure (AP)-DTIMS-MS are commercially developed, with
10 11
11
6
or applying
An additional benefit of
the TOFWERK IMS-TOF system recognized as the prime example.14 Traditionally, time-dispersive ion mobility has been paired with quadrupole ion traps 16
15
12
and time-of-flight (ToF) analyzers
13
resolutions and scan speeds ideally suited for time-nested analysis. Contemporary commercial
14
IM-Q-ToF MS instruments are designed to maximize sensitivity, and commonly incorporate ion
15
trapping and transfer stages in order to alleviate the intrinsically low IM duty cycles.16-18 Spatial
16
and temporal DTIMS-MS multiplexing approaches, which encompass either arrays of mobility
17
analyzers coupled to a single detector or time-multiplexing of multiple ion injection pulses per
18
IM acquisition, have also been used to improve IM duty cycle.
19
pseudo-random sequence multiplexing methods have enabled favorable increases in signal-to-
20
noise ratios and sensitivity, while also retaining the higher theoretical resolving powers,
21
enhancing instrument efficiency for more practical applications of AP-DTIMS.22,
22
advances in coupling atmospheric pressure ion mobility with FT ion cyclotron resonance (ICR)
23
mass spectrometry are pushing the boundaries of achievable peak capacity.24 Initial cost,
24
however, still prevents FTICR instrumentation from becoming mainstream.
, with modern ToF technology now providing mass
19-21
Hadamard transform and
23
Recent
25
Presented in this work is the combination of atmospheric pressure DTIMS with Orbitrap
26
FT-MS, aimed at both increasing drift tube IMS separation power and providing higher mass
27
accuracy and stability for better annotation of unknowns. One of the challenges with combining 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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DTIMS with Orbitrap is that the analyzer scan times are rather long in comparison with TOF,
2
with only a single report on a custom ion mobility drift cell paired with a modified Orbitrap MS
3
currently in the literature.25 In contrast, we here present the coupling of an unmodified Thermo
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Q-Exactive Orbitrap mass spectrometer to a commercially developed, fully modular
5
EXCELLIMS MA3100 atmospheric pressure drift tube ion mobility spectrometer. The DTIMS
6
module is equipped with dual ion gates, which not only serve to define the boundaries of the drift
7
region, but also enable several different modes of mobility selection and filtering,
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accommodating the Orbitrap scan speeds. Several key mobility parameters, including drift tube
9
temperature, drift gas flow rate, and electric field strength in both positive and negative ion
10
modes were optimized. The effect of DTIMS gate pulse width on IM-MS resolving power,
11
together with the impact of fixed-gate versus scanned-gate acquisition modes on system
12
sensitivity, was also explored. Primary consideration was given to understanding Orbitrap
13
variables that determine maximum detector scan rate, such as injection time (IT) and automatic
14
gain control (AGC) settings, while investigating system limits of detection. Envisioned
15
applications for this system include rapid screening of complex combinatorial libraries and rapid
16
metabolomics phenotyping.
17
Experimental
18
Chemicals and Materials
19
Positive mode ion mobility calibration standards including 2,6-ditertbutyl pyridine
20
(≥97%), nicotinamide (≥99.5%), trihexylamine (≥96%), and negative mode standard citric acid
21
(≥99.5%) were purchased from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO). Positive mode standards were
22
mixed in a 1:1:1 ratio in 80:20 methanol/water at 25 ppm w/v (i.e. 130 pmol µL-1, 204 pmol µL-
23
1
24
concentration series of negative mode citric acid standard, ranging from 100 ppb to 100 ppm w/v
25
(~0.52–520 pmol µL-1), was prepared by serial dilution of a 1000 ppm w/v stock solution
26
dissolved in 80:20 methanol/water. Solutions containing isomeric Gly-Asp-Gly-Arg-Ser and Ser-
, and 93 pmol µL-1 of 2,6-ditertbutyl pyridine, nicotinamide, and trihexylamine, respectively). A
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Arg-Gly-Asp-Gly peptide sequences were prepared in 50:50 acetonitrile/water with 0.1% formic
2
acid to 1 mg mL-1 following the protocol provided with the Waters reverse peptide kit
3
(P#700005089), obtained from Waters Corporation (Milford, MA), and then mixed and diluted
4
to 100 ppm w/v (204 pmol µL-1). Sugar analytes D-(+)-raffinose pentahydrate (≥98%), D-(+)-
5
melezitose hydrate (≥99%), and D-(+)-melibiose (≥98%) were also procured from Sigma
6
Aldrich, and dissolved in 80:20 methanol/water as a 100 ppm w/v mixture (~168 pmol µL-1 for
7
D-(+)-raffinose and D-(+)-melezitose hydrates, and 292 pmol µL-1 for D-(+)-melebiose) with
8
≥2.5 molar excess of NaCl. HPLC grade methanol or acetonitrile organic solvents (Sigma
9
Aldrich) and ultra-pure 18.2 MΩ cm deionized water (Barnstead Nanopure Diamond, Van Nuys,
10
Ca) were used for all analyte solutions. High-purity nitrogen (99.998%) and ultra-zero grade
11
compressed air (99.998%) were acquired from Airgas Inc. (Atlanta, GA) and used as DTIMS
12
buffer gases.
13 14
Instrumentation and System Parameters
15
The EXCELLIMS MA3100 drift tube ion mobility spectrometer uses a traditional
16
stacked-ring electrode construction, with the cell body divided into a desolvation and a drift
17
segment, 6.25 cm and 10.55 cm long, respectively. For reference, the electrodes are thin steel
18
bands (width: ~4.5 mm, spacing: ~1 mm), all resistively-coupled to one another via printed
19
circuit board connections and secured to a rectangular ceramic support (50 mm x 25 mm). The
20
insulated ceramic block is temperature-regulated (≤250 ̊C) using resistive heating elements
21
positioned along the cell body and at the drift gas inlet. Operation potentials up to ±10,000 V
22
were applied to the desolvation cell inlet, resulting in a maximum linear electric field gradient of
23
~570 V cm-1 across the entire drift space.
24
Attached in front of the desolvation chamber is a source enclosure housing a “sheathless”
25
(i.e. without nebulizing gas) electrospray tip (50 µm i.d.), adjustable to a maximum potential of
26
±5000 V relative to the IMS inlet bias. The MA3100 design features two Bradbury-Nielsen ion
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shutters, situated at the entrance and the exit of the drift cell. The first and second ion gates are
2
floated at ~62.9 % and ~7.7 % of the operation potential, respectively. The first ion gate is pulsed
3
with a tunable symmetric potential of ±70 V during conventional drift mode operation. At the
4
end of the drift region and positioned directly behind the second ion gate/aperture grid is a
5
Faraday anode disk with a 6.4 mm diameter opening allowing partial ion transmission to the
6
entrance of the Orbitrap’s ion transfer capillary. Compressed air or nitrogen drift gas (≤3.0 L
7
min-1) is delivered through a heated input line at the drift cell terminus, passed as a symmetric
8
sheath-flow across the anode, and pumped out (≤3.5 L/min) through an exhaust port located at
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the front of the desolvation cell via a diaphragm pump. Gas feed lines, high voltage electronics,
10
and multifunction data acquisition DAQ hardware are contained in the MA3100 peripheral
11
controller box connected to the DTIMS and Orbitrap computer system. Controller box
12
commands were issued using the EXCELLIMS VisIon software (version 1.2.0.31). Known drift
13
tube dimensions and experimentally-determined optimal settings for key mobility parameters in
14
positive and negative ion mode are outlined in Table 1.
15
The MA3100 module was mounted to the atmospheric pressure interface of a Thermo
16
Fisher Q-Exactive Orbitrap mass spectrometer. A schematic of the system configuration is
17
depicted in Figure 1. Ion transport past the DTIMS Faraday detector was governed by the
18
combined effect of the vacuum pull within the interface preceding the mass spectrometer inlet
19
and the electrostatic fields applied. The Q-Exactive MS Tune source voltages and sheath gas
20
flows were assigned “0” values (switched off) and the S-Lens RF level was held at 50 V. The ion
21
transfer capillary temperature was set to match the drift tube temperature (60-240 °C). Parameter
22
space experiments focused on the Orbitrap detector automatic gain control (AGC), injection time
23
(IT), and resolution settings that influenced the effective analytical cycle time. Unless otherwise
24
specified, the mass resolution was set at 17,500 to afford the fastest possible analyzer scan rate
25
(~12 Hz). During IM-MS analysis, AGC threshold was tuned to a minimum of 2.0E+04 ion
26
counts or a maximum of 5.0E+06 ion counts, while IT was varied from 100-2000 ms. The
27
number of microscans setting was left at 1, and the mass range was typically set between 50-500 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Da. For fragmentation studies with peptides using the high-energy collision dissociation (HCD)
2
cell, the normalized collision energy (NCE) was 20-45 V for an all ion fragmentation (AIF)
3
range centered at m/z = 400 Da. Orbitrap analysis was conducted using Thermo Xcalibur 2.6
4
software. ProteinProspector software version 5.17.1 (University of California, San Francisco,
5
USA) was used for assignment of peptide ion fragments. Most relevant MS settings are
6
summarized in Table 1.
7 8
5.3.3. DTIMS Ion Gating Schemes
9
The MA3100 is equipped to perform several analysis modes based on various trigger
10
configurations of the dual ion shutters. For “Faraday mode” acquisitions, the second ion gate was
11
held open at a set potential, thereby serving as an open aperture grid, while the first ion gate was
12
pulsed open/closed once per sweep scan and signal current was recorded at the DTIMS anode.
13
When operating with MS detection, the second ion gate was also utilized to select (or filter)
14
target ions using several distinct modes (Figure 2, Table 1). In “gated mode,” the second ion gate
15
was pulsed open following a delay after the first gate pulse, and signal for ions transmitted
16
through the fixed-gate time window was measured by the Orbitrap MS detector. Using the
17
alternative “scan mode,” the second gate pulse was scanned in sequential time bins across the
18
defined drift period in order to generate a complete mobility-mass dataset.
19
The gate pulse widths for each ion shutter ranged from 30 µs to the full mobility
20
acquisition period (≤50 ms). The first gate pulse width in all experiments was varied between 50-
21
600 µs; larger pulse widths resulted in a total loss of spectral resolution. In gated mode, the
22
second ion gate was typically pulsed open for a narrow 1-2 ms over the selected drift time
23
interval or mobility peak of interest. Scan mode functions required definition of the drift time
24
interval or scan duration, the second ion gate pulse width, and the step size of the scanned second
25
gate. Unless otherwise specified, the scan time window was set within a range of 4-16 ms over
26
the standard 20.3 ms mobility acquisition period, following a short delay (≤1 ms) from the first
27
ion gate trigger pulse (the period was defined as an uneven value to reduce periodic anode 8 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Analytical Chemistry
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noise). DTIMS dwell time was set to 1015 ms, which equated to 50 Faraday acquisitions per gate
2
scan step for the set 20.3 ms scan period. Except during specific characterization experiments,
3
the first and second gate pulse widths were set equal to one another. The second gate was
4
stepped at time intervals ½ to ¼ the pulse width over the defined scan window to effectively
5
oversample, rendering scan-step-to-pulse-width ratios of 2:1 or 4:1. VisIon Faraday spectra were
6
generated from 20 second summations of full-period mobility scans, and mass spectra were
7
produced from total scan time averages of the Orbitrap TIC spectra. When ion mobility
8
separations were not desired, the DTIMS unit functioned as a passive guide for ion transmission
9
simply by floating both ion gates “open” at voltages defined by the drift cell potential gradient
10
(e.g. “open mode”).
11 12
Results and Discussion
13
AP-DTIMS Basic Performance Optimization
14
Performance of the AP-DTIMS unit was first characterized for key physical parameters
15
affecting ion mobility separation, namely drift electric field strength, drift gas temperature, and
16
drift gas flow rate. A systematic exploration of these parameters on attributes such as sensitivity
17
and resolution is presented in the supporting information (Figures S1-S3), but the main findings
18
are summarized here, with optimum parameters presented in Table 1. In positive ion mode, the
19
greatest resolving power (Rp≥70) and signal intensities were achieved using the highest
20
programmable operating potentials (9000-10,000 V). This resolving power is comparable to
21
some existing low-pressure drift tube instruments (i.e. Agilent 6560), but with a short, compact
22
drift tube. Maximum signal in negative mode was achieved at a slightly reduced DTIMS
23
operating potential (-7000 to -8000 V) to avoid signal distortion from electron currents on the
24
Faraday detector originating from ion source discharges. These distortions could also be
25
mitigated by decreasing the electrospray potential (-2200 V) relative to the positive mode value
26
(2600 V). Higher DTIMS temperatures (180-220 °C) assisted droplet desolvation while retaining 9 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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resolving power, but temperatures in excess of 240 °C induced currents in the Faraday plate
2
detector and an artificial elevation of the spectral baseline by ~3 V. Drift gas flow rate, in
3
combination with DTIMS temperature, had the most influence on drift gas uniformity and signal
4
fidelity. Balancing a higher drift gas input (2.0-3.0 L min-1) with a lower exhaust pumping rate
5
(≤1.5 L min-1) had an optimal effect on signal, facilitating ion declustering and stabilizing gas
6
flow for ion transmission. High exhaust pump rates were prone to disrupt the electrospray
7
stability.
8 9
DTIMS Gate Pulse Width and Scan Step Functions
10
The contribution of various gate pulse widths on DTIMS-Orbitrap MS sensitivity and
11
resolving power was investigated to better understand the effect of scanning gate operation
12
parameters. Analysis of a citric acid standard was performed in negative ion mode using
13
different gate 1 and gate 2 pulse width ratios, and different scan step increments to control over-
14
or under-sampling. Figure 3A shows the Faraday responses for 4 ppm w/v (~21 pmol µL-1) citric
15
acid with gradually increasing gate #1 pulse widths. The mobility peaks showed increasing
16
abundances with near linearity until a gate #1 pulse width of approximately 300 µs. Beyond this
17
value, the peaks plateaued and broadened, further diminishing mobility resolving power. In
18
practice, increasing the gate #1 pulse width also extends the drift time by a commensurate
19
amount on the falling edge of the widening peak so the peaks in Figure 3 were aligned to a
20
centroid by subtracting ½ pulse width from the drift time. For Faraday mode, gate #1 pulse
21
widths of 75-150 µs were determined to provide the best balance between sensitivity and
22
resolving power.
23
The effect of gate #2 pulse operations relative to gate #1 was evaluated in scan mode.
24
Orbitrap parameters, further discussed in the next section, were set as follows: resolution=
25
17,500 [12 Hz], AGC= 5.0E+06, IT= 1000 ms. The gate #1 pulse width was set to 100 µs, while
26
gate #2 pulse widths were varied from 25-400 µs over a drift time scan window of 2.5 ms
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centered on the citric acid drift time (Figure 3B). For the shortest gate #2 pulse width (25 µs), no
2
signal was detected since the programmed pulse width was below the rated cut-off of the ion
3
shutter. Peak area was observed to increase with gate #2 width while resolution decreased for
4
gates wider than 100 µs, but resolving powers remained comparable to those observed from the
5
Faraday detector response (gate #1 and #2 at 100 µs: Rp ~60-70). For alignment, the citric acid
6
peaks were corrected for gate pulse width by subtracting ½ of the first gate pulse width and
7
adding ½ of the second gate pulse width. Improved timing correction for instances where the
8
pulse width of gate #2 was larger than gate #1 required addition of an extra adjustment factor
9
equal to (1/16)tgate#2, which is related to the scan step. As expected, shorter gate #2 pulse widths
10
relative to gate #1 resulted in lower intensity MS signals due to gate shutter “clipping” of ion
11
packets, with modest or no improvement to resolving power.
12
The impact of the scan step duration on signal was investigated independently, while
13
setting gate #1 and gate #2 pulse widths equal (100 µs). Gate scan steps were varied from 12.5
14
µs up to 200 µs for an IMS dwell time of 1015 ms, equating to 50 DTIMS acquisitions per scan
15
step over the 20.3 ms drift period. Orbitrap parameters were set as before (resolution: 17,500 [12
16
Hz], AGC: 5.0E+06, IT: 1000 ms). Figure 3C shows the citric acid MS signal using these
17
various scan steps, which corresponded to oversampling ratios of 8:1 (12.5 µs), 4:1 (25 µs), and
18
2:1 (50 µs), a matched sampling ratio of 1:1 (100 µs), and an undersampled ratio of 1:2.5 (250
19
µs). There was a minor drift time variance across peak apexes for the different scan steps, which
20
may be correlated with minute fluctuations in measured ion intensity over the different mobility
21
times. As expected, undersampling resulted in a dramatic loss of resolving power, with
22
oversampling being critical to refine peak shape when using gate #1 widths of 100 µs or larger.
23
An oversampling of 4:1 (25 µs) was observed to provide the best balance between adequate
24
sampling and overall speed of analysis.
25 26
Effect of Orbitrap Automatic Gain Control and Injection Time
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Apart from DTIMS gate pulsing schemes, the Orbitrap MS detector settings were the
2
other principal determinants of performance, as they potentially had a substantial influence on
3
sensitivity, resolution and analytical cycle time. Analyzer resolution, injection time, and
4
automatic gain control were examined while assessing DTIMS performance in both fixed-gate
5
and scan modes. The lowest available analyzer resolution (17,500) was chosen for all
6
characterization experiments in order to permit the fastest allowable acquisition rate (~12 Hz) for
7
the selected mass range (m/z = 50-500). The automatic gain control, which defined the threshold
8
for the target ion number, was set initially to the highest available value (5.0E+06) in order to set
9
a fixed injection time. The maximum injection time, or the nominal duration of ion accumulation
10
and the rate-limiting cycle step governing sensitivity, was adjusted between 100-2000 ms, values
11
that allowed for adequate analyte detection.
12
Figure S.4 shows a calibration curve for a citric acid concentration series as a function of
13
injection time for a fixed-gate acquisition, i.e. holding the DTIMS gate #2 open for a set window
14
at a specified drift time (gate #1 pulse width: 100 µs, gate #2 window: 2.5 ms). Interestingly, no
15
notable differences were observed when increasing Orbitrap injection times from 100 to 2000
16
ms, with the average signal intensities for ~110 total spectra being similar for each IT tested
17
(RSD ~3.6% excluding 100 ppb). It was initially expected that signal intensity would scale not
18
just with concentration, but also proportionately with the number of mobility peaks binned to the
19
C-trap prior to injection and mass analysis (see Supporting Information for more detail).
20
However, our results seem to indicate imperfect synchronization between mobility and mass
21
analysis. Presuming the Q-Exactive operated here by continuously scanning at ~12 Hz during
22
“zero” injection time bins, e.g. either measuring blank/incomplete spectra between injection
23
events for larger IT values or acquiring partial scans at lower IT values, a plausible consequence
24
would be the net signal average appearing equal across all injection times. Significantly, it must
25
be noted that despite an expected variation for extracted TIC peak intensity associated with each
26
injection event, the VisIon software reports this total average signal intensity derived from the
27
MS TIC data, as represented in Figure S.4. 12 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Based on the linear portion of the citric acid concentration curve (0.1-10 ppm), the limit
2
of detection was estimated to be approximately ~800 ppb w/v (~4 pmol µL-1). Setting a fixed
3
Orbitrap injection time (IT: 1000 ms), the same trend in the concentration curve was observed
4
when switching from DTIMS fixed-gate acquisition to scan mode acquisition, i.e. scanning
5
DTIMS gate #2 pulses across the full drift period (gate #1 & #2 pulse widths: 100 µs, scan step:
6
25 µs). In this mode, overall intensities were lower by 2-3 orders of magnitude. The loss in
7
sensitivity here while scan-stepping DTIMS gate #2 was expected, as the peak signal previously
8
measurable in a single Orbitrap scan using fixed-gate mode was now divided among smaller
9
sequential DTIMS time bin segments now defined by the gate #2 pulse width and scan step.
10
The AGC parameters had a more pronounced effect at higher sample concentrations and
11
specific injection times. Figure S.5 shows overlaid MS drift traces for a scan mode acquisition of
12
25 ppm w/v citric acid using low (2.0E+04 counts) or high (5.0E+06 counts) AGC values with
13
the nominal injection time set to IT = 1000 ms. With the high AGC setting, injection time
14
remained stable at 1000 ms, as the total measured ion intensity was always below the target AGC
15
threshold for the tested analyte concentration. However, for the same analyte concentration, it
16
was possible to surpass the lower AGC ion count threshold with an injection time under 1000
17
ms, which resulted in erratic IT fluctuations down to several hundred milliseconds during
18
measurements. This variable decrease in IT for the lower AGC setting corresponded to an
19
effective increase in the number of citric acid peak detection events during Orbitrap scan cycles,
20
indicated by the fine structure in the broad red MS trace. Despite essentially equivalent peak
21
areas for both signal traces, more Orbitrap scan cycles featuring analyte injection/detection
22
translated again to a greater average signal intensity reported for the lower AGC setting (red
23
trace) in Figure S.5.
24 25
DTIMS-Orbitrap MS Applications
26
Several test analyte sets were investigated to explore system performance in applications
27
involving isomer separation and identification. Figure 4A shows the Faraday response and 13 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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associated mass spectrum for a 100 ppm w/v mixture of two reverse peptides (Ser-Asp-Gly-Arg-
2
Gly and Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser) collected using optimized mobility parameters and scan mode
3
acquisition (gate #1 and #2 pulse width: 150 µs, scan step: 50 µs, scan window: 5-15 ms). Three
4
species were detected in the Faraday trace, representing the singly charged peptide monomers
5
(m/z = 491.221) overlapping at td = 12.25 ms and the doubly protonated monomers (m/z =
6
246.114) of GRGDS and SDGRG at td = 7.12 ms and 7.45 ms, respectively. The [M+2H]2+
7
peptide species, having reported collision cross-section areas of Ω = 222.7 Å2 and Ω = 211.7 Å2
8
at 250˚C in N2,26 were clearly resolved to baseline by AP-DTIMS (Rp~72) with roughly double
9
the resolving power possible for these ions using TWIMS (Rp>36). Isomer identities were
10
verified by drift time measurements for single-component peptide standards, and were further
11
confirmed by high-energy collision dissociation (HCD) MS/MS experiments of the mobility-
12
resolved sequence isomers. Figure 4B-C shows the characteristic HCD MS/MS spectra for the
13
peptide sequences with their unique fragment assignments.
14
In addition to the reverse peptide sequences, a simple carbohydrate mixture of sugar
15
isomers and structural homologues was examined. Analyte solutions were concentrated at 100
16
ppm w/v with a 2.5x excess of NaCl salt to facilitate positive mode ionization via sodium adduct
17
formation. Figure 5A-D depicts VisIon spectral data for both Faraday and MS detectors obtained
18
using a DTIMS scan mode over a 4 ms scan acquisition window. The 200 µs gate pulse widths
19
used resulted in a small reduction in Rp to benefit sensitivity and a large solvent signal recorded
20
in the Faraday channel. Within the drift time zone of 9-13 ms, four distinct signals were
21
observed. In order of increasing td, the carbohydrate peaks were assigned to [M+Na]+ for the
22
disaccharide D-(+)-melibiose (m/z = 365.105) at td = 9.94 ms, and the trisaccharide isomers D-
23
(+)-melezitose (m/z = 527.158) and D-(+)-raffinose (m/z = 527.158) a td = 11.70 ms and td =
24
12.19 ms, respectively. The peak order was consistent with mobility distribution reports from the
25
literature 15, 27 and was verified by injecting single-component solutions of the standards. The one
26
peak not assigned to a sugar at td = 10.70 ms is a suspected contaminant tentatively identified as
27
the sodiated adduct of decamethylcyclopentasiloxane (m/z = 393.082), a common ESI 14 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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background ion. The m/z vs. drift time plot conveyed an additional approach to visualize the
2
data, portraying the nested IM-MS distribution and precursor ion trend-lines. The ellipses drawn
3
on the plot demark peaks for the carbohydrates and contaminant ion, while filtering any other
4
background signal overlapping in the same mass/mobility region. This data show the power of
5
AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS for discriminating isobaric analytes in complex chemical systems.
6 7
Conclusion
8
This work involved characterization of a dual-gate AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap system,
9
showcasing its performance capabilities to date. The DTIMS unit afforded the greatest separation
10
efficiency near the maximum operation potential of 10,000 V while using gas temperatures ≥200
11
˚C and high drift gas flow rates of 2.0-3.0 L min-1 balanced with lower exhaust pump rates of
12
0.5-1.5 L min-1. The effects of different ion mobility gating schemes on sensitivity and resolving
13
power were thoroughly investigated. It was found that resolving power (Rp≤70) was mostly
14
determined by the initial DTIMS gate pulse width (50-150 µs), and during scan mode analysis,
15
the scan step bin width for the second ion gate if pulse width was set equal to the first gate.
16
Likewise, sensitivity and throughput were primarily dictated by DTIMS gate pulse width, while
17
Orbitrap parameters governing analytical cycle had a subtler and more complex influence.
18
Orbitrap variable injection times did not appear to significantly alter intensity levels at high gain
19
settings, but had a more pronounced impact on average signal intensity at the lowest gain settings
20
and higher analyte concentrations. The optimized AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS parameter settings
21
were used to successfully resolve simple mixtures of peptide and sugar isomers, and HCD
22
MS/MS was performed to further confirm peptide identities based on characteristic
23
fragmentation spectra. Future experiments will include collision cross section measurements and
24
peak capacity estimations for the IM-MS platform, with the ultimate outlook for this system
25
involving implementation of multiplexed sampling approaches. Further improvements in
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1
resolving power through the use of longer drift tubes, more effective ion gating, and higher drift
2
voltages, are also envisioned.
3 4 5 6
Acknowledgements This work was supported by the National Science Foundation and the NASA Astrobiology Program, under the NSF Center for Chemical Evolution (CHE-1504217).
7
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Ruotolo, B. T.; McLean, J. A.; Gillig, K. J.; Russell, D. H. J. Mass Spectrom. 2004, 39, 361-367. May, J. C.; Goodwin, C. R.; Lareau, N. M.; Leaptrot, K. L.; Morris, C. B.; Kurulugama, R. T.; Mordehai, A.; Klein, C.; Barry, W.; Darland, E.; Overney, G.; Imatani, K.; Stafford, G. C.; Fjeldsted, J. C.; McLean, J. A. Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 2107-2116. Valentine, S. J.; Kulchania, M.; Barnes, C. A. S.; Clemmer, D. E. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 2001, 212, 97-109. Valentine, S. J.; Kurulugama, R. T.; Bohrer, B. C.; Merenbloom, S. I.; Sowell, R. A.; Mechref, Y.; Clemmer, D. E. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 2009, 283, 149-160. Pringle, S. D.; Giles, K.; Wildgoose, J. L.; Williams, J. P.; Slade, S. E.; Thalassinos, K.; Bateman, R. H.; Bowers, M. T.; Scrivens, J. H. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 2007, 261, 1-12. Matz, L. M.; Hill Jr, H. H.; Beegle, L. W.; Kanik, I. J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 2002, 13, 300-307. Allen, S. J.; Giles, K.; Gilbert, T.; Bush, M. F. Analyst 2016, 141, 884-891. Gillig, K. J.; Chen, C.-H. Mass Spectrometry 2014, 3, S0032. Gillig, K. J.; Ruotolo, B. T.; Stone, E. G.; Russell, D. H. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 2004, 239, 43-49. Hill Jr., H. H.; Siems, W. F.; St. Louis, R. H.; G., M. D. Anal. Chim. Acta 1990, 62, 1201A-1209A. Kanu, A. B.; Gribb, M. M.; Hill, H. H., Jr. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 6610-6619. Revercomb, H. E.; Mason, E. A. Anal. Chem. 1975, 47, 970-983. Siems, W. F.; Wu, C.; Tarver, E. E.; Hill, H. H.; Larsen, P. R.; McMinn, D. G. Anal. Chem. 1994, 66, 4195-4201. Kaplan, K.; Graf, S.; Tanner, C.; Gonin, M.; Fuhrer, K.; Knochenmuss, R.; Dwivedi, P.; Hill, H. H. Anal. Chem. 2010, 82, 9336-9343. Clowers, B. H.; Hill, H. H., Jr. Anal. Chem. 2005, 77, 5877-5885. Henderson, S. C.; Valentine, S. J.; Counterman, A. E.; Clemmer, D. E. Anal. Chem. 1999, 71, 291-301. Clowers, B. H.; Ibrahim, Y. M.; Prior, D. C.; Danielson, W. F.; Belov, M. E.; Smith, R. D. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 612-623. Ibrahim, Y. M.; Baker, E. S.; Danielson, W. F.; Norheim, R. V.; Prior, D. C.; Anderson, G. A.; Belov, M. E.; Smith, R. D. Int. J. Mass Spectrom. 2015, 377, 655-662. May, J. C.; McLean, J. A. Anal. Chem. 2015, 87, 1422-1436. Belov, M. E.; Clowers, B. H.; Prior, D. C.; Danielson Iii, W. F.; Liyu, A. V.; Petritis, B. O.; Smith, R. D. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 5873-5883. Kwasnik, M.; Caramore, J.; Fernández, F. M. Anal. Chem. 2009, 81, 1587-1594. Clowers, B. H.; Belov, M. E.; Prior, D. C.; Danielson, W. F.; Ibrahim, Y.; Smith, R. D. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 2464-2473. Zhang, X.; Knochenmuss, R.; Siems, W. F.; Liu, W.; Graf, S.; Hill, H. H. Anal. Chem. 2014, 86, 1661-1670. Tang, X.; Bruce, J. E.; Hill, H. H. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2007, 21, 1115-1122. Ibrahim, Y. M.; Garimella, S. V. B.; Prost, S. A.; Wojcik, R.; Norheim, R. V.; Baker, E. S.; Rusyn, I.; Smith, R. D. Anal. Chem. 2016, 88, 12152-12160. Wu, C.; Siems, W. F.; Klasmeier, J.; Hill, H. H. Anal. Chem. 2000, 72, 391-395. 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 1: Illustration of the AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS instrument configuration.
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TABLE 1: Summary of key system parameters
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Figure 2: Illustration of the DTIMS dual-gate modes of operation for ion selection and filtering. The corresponding MS TIC traces for gate #2 operations using gated mode and scan mode IMMS acquisition schemes are shown.
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Figure 3: (A) Faraday response for 4 ppm w/v citric acid in 80:20 methanol/water for increasing DTIMS gate #1 pulse widths. (B) MS signal for 10 ppm w/v citric acid for increasing DTIMS gate #2 pulse widths over a 2.5 ms scan window. The gate #1 pulse width was 100 µs and the scan step was 25 µs. (C) MS signal for 10 ppm w/v citric acid for increasing DTIMS gate #2 scan step ratios over a 2.5 ms scan window. Gate #1 and #2 pulse widths were set equal at 100 µs. The number of data points per peak is plotted with each curve trace. For (A-C), DTIMS operation potential was -7000 V, drift gas temperature was 200 ˚C, and drift gas flow rate and exhaust pump rate were 2.0 L min-1 and 0.5 L min-1, respectively. 22 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 4: Scan mode averaged mass spectrum and Faraday response (inset) for 100 ppm w/v of mixture of [Ser-Asp-Gly-Arg-Gly] and [Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser] peptide sequence isomers in 50:50 acetonitrile/water with 0.1% formic acid (A). All ion fragmentation HCD of the separated peptide isomers using a normalized collision energy of 20 V, where individual [M+2H]+ species were isolated by ion mobility before fragmentation (B and C). Asterisks (*) denote identified sidechain fragments of serine, aspartic acid, and arginine. (DTIMS operation potential: 10,000 V, drift gas temperature: 220 ˚C, drift gas flow rate: 3.0 L min-1, exhaust pump rate: 1.5 L min-1; gate #1 and #2 pulse width: 150 µs; scan step: 50 µs). 23 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Figure 5: AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS analysis for 100 ppm solution (w/v in 50:50 methanol/water) of 3 saccharides: D-(+)-melibiose, D-(+)-melezitose, and D-(+)-raffinose. Panels show the extracted mass spectra for each mixture component (A), the corresponding Faraday response (B), a map of the chemical space with m/z plotted as a function of drift time (C), and the extracted MS total ion chronograms (D). (gate #1 & #2: 200 µs, scan step: 50 µs; AGC: 5.0E+06, IT: 1000 ms, Resolution: 35,000).
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Figure 1: Illustration of the AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS instrument configuration. 195x144mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 2: Illustration of the DTIMS dual-gate modes of operation for ion selection and filtering. The corresponding MS TIC traces for gate #2 operations using gated mode and scan mode IM-MS acquisition schemes are shown. 151x115mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 3: (A) Faraday response for 4 ppm w/v citric acid in 80:20 methanol/water for increasing DTIMS gate #1 pulse widths. (B) MS signal for 10 ppm w/v citric acid for increasing DTIMS gate #2 pulse widths over a 2.5 ms scan window. The gate #1 pulse width was 100 µs and the scan step was 25 µs. (C) MS signal for 10 ppm w/v citric acid for increasing DTIMS gate #2 scan step ratios over a 2.5 ms scan window. Gate #1 and #2 pulse widths were set equal at 100 µs. The number of data points per peak is plotted with each curve trace. For (A-C), DTIMS operation potential was -7000 V, drift gas temperature was 200 ˚C, and drift gas flow rate and exhaust pump rate were 2.0 L min-1 and 0.5 L min-1, respectively. 214x342mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 4: Scan mode averaged mass spectrum and Faraday response (inset) for 100 ppm w/v of mixture of [Ser-Asp-Gly-Arg-Gly] and [Gly-Arg-Gly-Asp-Ser] peptide sequence isomers in 50:50 acetonitrile/water with 0.1% formic acid (A). All ion fragmentation HCD of the separated peptide isomers using a normalized collision energy of 20 V, where individual [M+2H]+ species were isolated by ion mobility before fragmentation (B and C). Asterisks (*) denote identified sidechain fragments of serine, aspartic acid, and arginine. (DTIMS operation potential: 10,000 V, drift gas temperature: 220 ˚C, drift gas flow rate: 3.0 L min-1, exhaust pump rate: 1.5 L min-1; gate #1 and #2 pulse width: 150 µs; scan step: 50 µs). 157x191mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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Figure 5: AP-DTIMS-Orbitrap MS analysis for 100 ppm solution (w/v in 50:50 methanol/water) of 3 saccharides: D-(+)-melibiose, D-(+)-melezitose, and D-(+)-raffinose. Panels show the extracted mass spectra for each mixture component (A), the corresponding Faraday response (B), a map of the chemical space with m/z plotted as a function of drift time (C), and the extracted MS total ion chronograms (D). (gate #1 & #2: 200 µs, scan step: 50 µs; AGC: 5.0E+06, IT: 1000 ms, Resolution: 35,000). 228x189mm (150 x 150 DPI)
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