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1.
Multistage mass spectrometry, as implemented using low-energy collision-induced dissociation (CID) analysis in three-dimensional (3D) quadrupole ion traps (QITs), has become a powerful tool for the investigation of protein glycosylation. In addition to the well-known combination of QITs with electrospray ionization (ESI), also a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization--quadrupole ion trap--reflectron time-of-flight (MALDI-QIT-rTOF) mass spectrometer has recently become available. This study systematically investigates the differences between these types of instrument, as applied to characterization of glycopeptides from human antithrombin. The glycopeptides were obtained by tryptic digestion followed by lectin-affinity purification. Some significant differences between the ESI-QIT and MALDI-QIT-rTOF approaches appeared, most of them are causally related to the desorption/ionization process. The combination of a vacuum MALDI source with an ion-trap analyzer accentuates some characteristic differences between MALDI and ESI due the longer time frame needed for the trapping process. In contrast to ESI, MALDI generated ions that exhibited considerable metastable fragmentation during trapping. The long time span of the QIT process (ms range) compared with that for conventional rTOF experiments (micros range) significantly magnified the extent of this metastable fragmentation. With the investigated glycopeptides, a complete depletion of the terminal sialic acids of the glycopeptides as well as a variety of other fragment ions was already found in the MS1 spectra from the MALDI-QIT-rTOF instrument. The positive ion low-energy CID spectra (MS2) of the selected glycopeptides obtained using the two different QIT equipped instruments were found to be quite similar. In both approaches, fragmentation of the glycan and peptide structures occurred sequentially, allowing unambiguous sequence determination. In the case of ESI-QIT-MS, fragmentation of the glycan structure occurred at the MS2 stage and fragmentation of the peptide structure was obtained only at the MS3 stage, which indicates the necessity of multistage CID experiments for complete structure elucidation. The MALDI-QIT-rTOF instrument yielded both kinds of fragments at the MS2 stage but without mutual interference.  相似文献   

2.
Atmospheric pressure matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation quadrupole ion trap (AP-MALDI/QIT) mass spectrometry has been investigated for the analysis of polyethylene glycol (PEG 1500) and a hyperbranched polymer (polyglycidol) in the presence of alkali-metal salts. Mass spectra of PEG 1500 obtained at atmospheric pressure showed dimetallated matrix/analyte adducts, in addition to the expected alkali-metal/PEG ions, for all matrix/alkali-metal salt combinations. The relative intensities of the desorbed ions were dependent on the matrix, the alkali-metal salt added to aid cationisation and the ion trap interface conditions [capillary temperature, in-source collisionally-induced dissociation (CID)]. These data indicate that the adducts are rapidly stabilised by collisional cooling enabling them to be transferred into the ion trap. Experiments using identical sample preparation conditions were carried out on a vacuum MALDI time-of-flight (ToF) mass spectrometer. In all cases, vacuum MALDI-ToF spectra showed only alkali-metal/PEG ions and no matrix/analyte adducts. The tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) capability of the ion trap has been demonstrated for a lithiated polyglycol yielding a rich fragment-ion spectrum. Analysis of the hyperbranched polymer polyglycidol by AP-MALDI/QIT reveals the characteristic ion series for these polymers as also observed under vacuum MALDI-ToF conditions.  相似文献   

3.
Measuring the residual polyethylene glycol (PEG) in polyethylene oxide (PEO)-based surfactants is important to fully understanding the performance of these materials. Traditional methods of quantitating PEG in PEO-based surfactants can be time-consuming and struggle with low amounts or overlapping molecular mass distributions. This paper describes a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry method developed to quantitate residual PEG in a series of ethoxylated surfactants. The technique addresses the difficulties faced in doing quantitative MALDI experiments by utilizing both internal standard and standard additions protocols. The method produces excellent straight line standard addition plots, and the quantitative results are verified using both a constructed standard and an independent traditional chromatographic separation.  相似文献   

4.
A commercial matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight (MALDI-ToF) instrument equipped with a curved field reflectron (CFR) was modified in order to perform collision-induced dissociation (CID) on a variety of biomolecules. The incorporation of a high-resolution ion gate together with a collision cell within the field-free region allowed tandem mass analysis (MS/MS), without the necessity to decelerate the precursor ions prior to activation. The simultaneous detection of all product ions remained possible by using the CFR. To test the MS/MS performances, ACTH (fragment 1-17), a complex high mannose carbohydrate (Man)(8)(GlcNac)(2) and a lysophosphatidylcholine lipid (18:1) were analysed on the modified instrument. Direct comparison with the low-energy product ion spectra, acquired on a MALDI quadrupole ion trap (QIT) two-stage reflectron time-of flight (ReToF) mass spectrometer, showed significant differences in the types of product ions observed. The additional ions detected were a clear indication of the high-energy fragmentation processes occurring in the collision cell.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of ion trap mass spectrometry (ITMS) in combination with the two desorption/ionization methods, electrospray (ESI) and atmospheric pressure matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization (AP‐MALDI), for the detection of antioxidants which are applied in lubricants. These experiments should form the base for future investigations of antioxidants in tribologically formed thin layers on the surface of frictional systems. Seventeen different antioxidants were selected out of the group of hindered phenolic and aromatic aminic compounds. Practically all antioxidants could be characterized by positive ion ESI‐ and AP‐MALDI‐ITMS, forming various types/species of molecular ions (e.g. [M]+ . , [M+H]+, [M+Na]+ or [M–2H+H]+). A few compounds could be analyzed by negative ion ESI‐MS, too, but none by negative ion AP‐MALDI‐MS. The influence of target materials in AP‐MALDI‐MS (gold‐ and titanium nitride (TiN)‐covered stainless steel, micro‐diamond‐covered hard metal, hand‐polished and sand‐blasted stainless steel targets) with respect to the molecular ion intensity and type of molecular ion of two selected antioxidants was evaluated. The surface properties are of particular interest because in friction tests different materials with different surface characteristics are used. However, the MS results indicate that optimal target surfaces have to be found for individual antioxidants in AP‐MALDI‐MS but in general smooth surfaces were superior to rough surfaces. Finally the gold‐covered stainless steel MALDI target provided the best mass spectra and was selected for all the antioxidants investigated. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
High-performance polymers are complex mixtures of materials of different size and chemical composition and with different end groups and architecture. To determine the molecular heterogeneity of such systems, hyphenation of several techniques is required. The value of coupling mass spectrometry (MS) with separation techniques has already been recognized - such methods have proved to be among the most powerful for molecular characterization of complex polymer systems.The review focuses on matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) MS coupled with liquid chromatography (LC). Such hyphenation has been used for most polymer analysis by mass spectrometry coupled with separation techniques. The advantages and/or limitations of these techniques for polymer characterization are discussed. Future prospects are briefly outlined.  相似文献   

8.
Polymer manufacturers add antioxidants, waxes, dyes, and other materials to enhance polymer utility or processing. Numerous analytical methods are available to characterize various chemical aspects of polymers including methods interfaced with mass spectrometry (MS) such as pyrolysis (Py), gas chromatography (GC), liquid chromatography (LC), and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Current methods work well, but because of the necessity of extraction, chromatography, or thermal methods, most are too time consuming for high throughput analyses which might be necessary in, for example, regulatory laboratories. Here we discuss three MS methods for rapid analysis of polymers; multi-sample MALDI MS which allows rapid analysis of low molecular weight polymers, atmospheric pressure (AP) solids analysis probe MS for direct ambient additives analysis, and APPy MS for polymer identification. The latter methods provide information regardless of the composition or molecular weight of the polymeric material.  相似文献   

9.
The development of reliable sample preparation methods has been critical to the success of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry experiments. Good MALDI sample preparation for polymers involves choosing the solvent system, the matrix, and the ionization agent correctly, and combining them in a manner that will lead to a sample that will produce the desired ions. The vast diversity of chemistry available in industrial polymers has challenged our ability to design reliable sample preparation methods. In the experiments reported here, we show that matrix-enhanced secondary ion mass spectrometry (MESIMS) is an effective analytical technique to explore sample segregation in solid phase MALDI samples. Qualitative comparison of MESIMS and MALDI results for polymer samples prepared with multiple matrices aids our investigation of the solid-phase solubility of a variety of low molecular weight polymer materials. Including the solid-phase solubility with the liquid-phase solubility of the polymer samples and the matrices enables the construction of a relative solubility chart, which shows the best solubility matches between the polymer and matrix materials for MALDI experiments.  相似文献   

10.
Research in polymer science and engineering is moving from classical methodologies to advanced analytical strategies in which mass spectrometry (MS)‐based techniques play a crucial role. The molecular complexity of polymers requires new characterization tools and approaches to elucidate the detailed structural information. In this contribution, a comparison study of poly(methyl acrylate)s (PMA) using different tandem mass spectrometry techniques (ESI, APCI, and MALDI MS/MS) is reported to provide insights into the macromolecular structure with the aid of a special MS/MS data interpretation software. Collision‐induced dissociation (CID) was utilized to examine the fragmentation pathways of PMAs synthesized via various controlled radical polymerization techniques. All three mass spectrometry techniques are used to analyze structural details of PMAs and the labile end‐groups are determined based on the fragmentation behavior in CID. Fragmentation products were identified which are characteristics for the cleavage between the polymer chain and the end‐group. The application of a tailor‐made software is shown to analyze complex MS/MS data, and it is proven that this kind of software will be helpful for polymer scientists to identify fragmentation products obtained by tandem mass spectrometry similar to the fields of proteomics, metabolomics, genomics, and glycomics. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem, 2013  相似文献   

11.
The gas-phase fragmentation reactions of 2-hydroxybenzyl-N-pyrimidinylamine derivatives (Compounds 1 to 6), the O-N-type acid-catalyzed Smiles rearrangement products of 2-pyrimidinyloxy-N-arylbenzylamine derivatives, have been examined via positive ion matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) mass spectrometry in FT-ICR MS and via negative ion electrospray ionization (ESI) in-source collision-induced dissociation (CID) mass spectrometry, respectively. The major fragmentation pathway of protonated 1 to 6 gives the F ions under IRMPD; theoretical results show that the retro-Michael reaction channel is more favorable in both thermodynamics and kinetics. This explanation is supported by H/D exchange experiments and the MS/MS experiment of acetylated 1. Deprotonated 1 to 6 give rise to the solitary E ions (aromatic nitrogen anions) in the negative ion in-source CID; theoretical calculations show that a retro-Michael mechanism is more reasonable than a gas-phase intramolecular nucleophilic displacement (SN2) mechanism to explain this reaction process.  相似文献   

12.
Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization time‐of‐flight mass spectrometry (MALDI‐TOF MS) coupled with CID (collision‐induced dissociation) has been used for the detailed characterization of two poly(2‐ethyl‐2‐oxazoline)s as part of a continuing study of synthetic polymers by MALDI‐TOF MS/MS. These experiments provided information about the variety of fragmentation pathways for poly(oxazoline)s. It was possible to show that, in addition to the eliminations of small molecules, like ethene and hydrogen, the McLafferty rearrangement is also a possible fragmentation route. A library of fragmentation pathways for synthetic polymers was also constructed and such a library should enable the fast and automated data analysis of polymers in the future. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Commercial copper wire and its polymer insulation cladding was investigated for the presence of three synthetic antioxidants (ADK STAB AO412S, Irganox 1010 and Irganox MD 1024) by three different mass spectrometric techniques including electrospray ionization–ion trap–mass spectrometry (ESI–IT–MS), matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization reflectron time‐of‐flight (TOF) mass spectrometry (MALDI–RTOF–MS) and reflectron TOF secondary ion mass spectrometry (RTOF–SIMS). The samples were analyzed either directly without any treatment (RTOF–SIMS) or after a simple liquid/liquid extraction step (ESI–IT–MS, MALDI–RTOF–MS and RTOF–SIMS). Direct analysis of the copper wire itself or of the insulation cladding by RTOF–SIMS allowed the detection of at least two of the three antioxidants but at rather low sensitivity as molecular radical cations and with fairly strong fragmentation (due to the highly energetic ion beam of the primary ion gun). ESI–IT‐ and MALDI–RTOF–MS‐generated abundant protonated and/or cationized molecules (ammoniated or sodiated) from the liquid/liquid extract. Only ESI–IT–MS allowed simultaneous detection of all three analytes in the extract of insulation claddings. The latter two so‐called ‘soft’ desorption/ionization techniques exhibited intense fragmentation only by applying low‐energy collision‐induced dissociation (CID) tandem MS on a multistage ion trap‐instrument and high‐energy CID on a tandem TOF‐instrument (TOF/RTOF), respectively. Strong differences in the fragmentation behavior of the three analytes could be observed between the different CID spectra obtained from either the IT‐instrument (collision energy in the very low eV range) or the TOF/RTOF‐instrument (collision energy 20 keV), but both delivered important structural information. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
We report our contribution to the systematic investigation of peptide fragmentations performed on high‐performance Tof equipment, operating in MS and MS/MS modes, such as ESI‐QqTof and MALDI‐Tof/Tof instruments that are commonly available today in proteomic laboratories. Whereas the former analyzer's configuration provides low‐energy collision‐induced dissociations (CID), the latter allows tunable activation methods of the selected parent ion to induce either metastable laser‐induced dissociations (LID) or high‐energy CID (‘gas on spectra LID’). Fragmentation of the monoprotonated ion of 53 peptides (FW 807–2853 g/mol) was undertaken upon low‐energy CID on an ESI‐QTof mass spectrometer (Waters) as well as high‐energy CID and LID conditions on a MALDI Ultraflex mass spectrometer (Bruker). Systematic comparison of MS/MS spectra provided useful information on the performance of each piece of equipment for efficient peptide sequencing and also insights into the observed fragmentation behaviors. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
ComparisionofFABandMALDIMassSpectrometryofGinsenosides¥ZhouYu;LiuZhiqiang;SongFengrui;LiuShuying;LiXianggao;YinJiangyuan(1Cha...  相似文献   

16.
A novel matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation quadrupole ion trap time-of-flight (MALDI QIT ToF) mass spectrometer has been used to analyse high mass peptide ions exceeding 2000 Da. Human adrenocorticotropic hormone (fragment 18-39) and oxidised bovine insulin chain B were utilised to evaluate the performance of the instrument both in MS and in MS/MS mode. Its ability to efficiently isolate ions and to fragment them using collisionally activated decomposition (CAD) has been demonstrated using mixtures diluted to the low-femtomole level on target. Additionally, multiple stage mass spectrometry (MS/MS/MS) provides a second-generation product ion spectrum in which new fragment ions are detected and new stretches of amino acids are identified.  相似文献   

17.
The 157 nm photofragmentation of native and derivatized oligosaccharides was studied in a linear ion trap and in a home-built matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) tandem time-of-flight (TOF/TOF) mass spectrometer, and the results were compared with collision-induced dissociation (CID) experiments. Photodissociation produces product ions corresponding to high-energy fragmentation pathways; for cation-derivatized oligosaccharides, it yields strong cross-ring fragment ions and provides better sequence coverage than low- and high-energy CID experiments. On the other hand, for native oligosaccharides, CID yielded somewhat better sequence coverage than photodissociation. The ion trap enables CID hybrid MS3 experiments on the high-energy fragment ions obtained from photodissociation.  相似文献   

18.
The results of fast atom bombardment (FAB), time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS), matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALD/I), electrospray ionization (ESI), and field desorption (FD) analyses of ethoxylated oligomers of 2,4,7,9-tetramethyl-5-decyne-4,7-diol (Surfynol® 104) were compared.Each of these desorption mass spectrometry (MS) techniques can produce spectra of unfragmented cationized oligomers. From the observed ion series we calculate average molecular weight information. We have compared the results of mass spectrometric analyses of a series of ethoxylated Surfynol surfactants. Our data indicate that FAB, ToF-SIMS, MALDI/I, and ESI produce similar results for the lower molecular weight species, but that as the average molecular weight increases FAB and SIMS produce slightly lower results than MALD/I and FD. This could be due to increased fragmentation. ESI produced a result similar to FAB and SIMS for the highest average molecular weight material. Further experiments compare the mass spectral results with gas chromatographic quantitative data. Although gas chromatography is not expected to accurately analyze the higher mass oligomers, we observe significant differences in intensities of the short-chain oligomers (especially the 0- and 1-mers) when compared to the desorption mass spectrometer results. These differences may reflect poor cationization efficiency for very short oligomer chains in the mass spectrometric analyses.  相似文献   

19.
Comparative MS/MS studies of singly and doubly charged electrospray ionization (ESI) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) precursor peptide ions are described. The spectra from these experiments have been evaluated with particular emphasis on the data quality for subsequent data processing and protein/amino acid sequence identification. It is shown that, once peptide ions are formed by ESI or MALDI, their charge state, as well as the collision energy, is the main parameter determining the quality of collision-induced dissociation (CID) MS/MS fragmentation spectra of a given peptide. CID-MS/MS spectra of singly charged peptides obtained on a hybrid quadrupole orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer resemble very closely spectra obtained by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization post-source decay time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-PSD-TOFMS). On the other hand, comparison of CID-MS/MS spectra of either singly or doubly charged ion species shows no dependence on whether ions have been formed by ESI or MALDI. This observation confirms that, at the time of precursor ion selection, further mass analysis is effectively decoupled from the desorption/ionization event. Since MALDI ions are predominantly formed as singly charged species and ESI ions as doubly charged, the associated difference in the spectral quality of MS/MS spectra as described here imposes direct consequences on data processing, database searching using ion fragmentation data, and de novo sequencing when ionization techniques are changed.  相似文献   

20.
An experimental comparison of product ion spectra produced by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ion-trap MS( n) for a group of small drug molecules is presented in this paper. The goal of the study was to demonstrate the usefulness of MALDI-MS with post-source decay (PSD) and collision-induced dissociation (CID) for the structural analysis of small drug molecules in the drug discovery process, where traditionally electrospray LC/MS methods are used. PSD and PSD/CID gave diverse product ions that were highly indicative of the structure of the drugs investigated (a group of 4-quinolone antibiotics and oleandomycin). In addition, the number of different product ions generated with MALDI-MS was always higher than with electrospray ion-trap MS( n) (with n < or =4) for the drug molecules studied. This investigation also showed that the choice of a suitable MALDI matrix for the analysis of low molecular weight compounds is quite important. It was found that of the three matrices examined, alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (alpha-CHCA) produced the most intense fragmentation levels while TiO2, with its advantage of virtually no low mass background signals, did not generate quite the same amount of information.  相似文献   

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