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1.
It has been demonstrated that substituted indoles fully labelled with deuterium on the aromatic ring can undergo substantial exchange back to partial and even fully protonated forms during atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation (APCI) liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS). The degree of this exchange was strongly dependent on the absolute quantity of analyte, the APCI desolvation temperature, the nature of the mobile phase, the mobile phase flow rate and the instrument used. Hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange on several other aromatic ring systems during APCI LC/MS was either undetectable (nitrobenzene, aniline) or extremely small (acetanilide) compared to the effect observed for substituted indoles. This observation has major implications for quantitative assays using deuterium‐labelled internal standards and for the detection of deuterium‐labelled products from isotopically labelled feeding experiments where there is a risk of back exchange to the protonated form during the analysis. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
A reliable, sensitive and selective liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) method has been developed to determine four trichothecene mycotoxins (nivalenol, deoxynivalenol, fusarenon X and 3-acetyldeoxynivalenol) in maize. Sample preparation was performed by extracting the analytes with a mixture of acetonitrile and water, followed by a solid-phase extraction with Carbograph-4 cartridges as the purification step. For the LC/MS/MS analysis two interfacing systems, Turbo IonSpray (TISP) and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI), were compared in both negative and positive ion modes. LC and MS parameters were optimized to achieve better results and sensitivity. The effect of mobile phase modifiers such as ammonium acetate and formic acid on the ionization yield was also evaluated. The best results were obtained using the electrospray ionization (ESI) interface in negative ion mode and the multiple reaction monitoring mode (MRM) for the quantitation. The detection limits ranged between 10 ng/g for fusarenon X and 1.5 ng/g for deoxynivalenol. A linear working range was achieved with a standard deviation between 3 and 10% and recovery rates from the maize samples above 81%. The procedure was applied to the analysis of a set of maize samples collected from farms located in different areas of northern and central Italy. The investigated samples turned out to be contaminated primarily with deoxynivalenol and, to a minor extent, with its derivatives.  相似文献   

3.
On-line atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) were evaluated for the analysis of a variety of steroids. Steroids were classified into three major groups based on the spectra and the sensitivities observed: (I) those containing a 3-one, 4-ene functional group, (II) those containing at least one ketone group without conjugation, and (III) those containing hydroxy group(s) only. In the APCI mode, the best sensitivity and the lowest detection limit for all three groups were obtained by using a mobile phase consisting of methanol and 1%–2% acetic acid in water. The APCI spectra were characterized by MH+, MH+-H2O, MH+-2H2O, etc., with the degree of H2O loss being compound dependent: group I steroids produced stable MH+ and group III steroids showed extensive water loss. In the electrospray mode the best sensitivity and the lowest detection limit for the first two groups were obtained when pure methanol and water were used as the mobile phase. This condition produced abundant stable MNa+ due to ubiquitous sodium. Detection limits in the 5–15 pg range can be easily achieved using ESI LC/MS. Addition of ammonium acetate or use of acetonitrile in the mobile phase, common in the LC/MS analysis of steroids, decreased the sensitivity for the group I and II steroids and thus should be avoided. For group III steroids, the detection limit can be improved by the addition of acetic acid to the mobile phase.  相似文献   

4.
Until recently, atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI) has typically been used for the determination of non-polar halogenated flame retardants (HFRs) by liquid chromatography (LC) tandem mass spectrometry. In this study, we demonstrated the feasibility of utilizing liquid chromatography atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) tandem mass spectrometry (LC-APCI-MS/MS) for analysis of 38 HFRs. This developed method offered three advantages: simplicity, rapidity, and high sensitivity. Compared with APPI, APCI does not require a UV lamp and a dopant reagent to assist atmospheric pressure ionization. All the isomers and the isobaric compounds were well resolved within 14-min LC separation time. Excellent instrument detection limits (6.1 pg on average with 2.0 μL injection) were observed. The APCI mechanism was also investigated. The method developed has been applied to the screening of wastewater samples for screening purpose, with concentrations determined by LC-APCI-MS/MS agreeing with data obtained via gas chromatography high resolution mass spectrometry.
Figure
LC-APCI-MS/MS for analysis of halogenated flame reterdants  相似文献   

5.
The capabilities of atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) methods for quantitative analysis of polar and ionic compounds in petroleum fractions have been examined. The requirements of the analysis for sensitivity, linear dynamic range, and structural characterization have been discussed. ESI was found to be approximately two orders of magnitude more sensitive than APCI and is most suitable for the detection of analytes in weak concentrations. Equivalent relative linear dynamic ranges were observed by the two methods (at least three orders of magnitude). For the relatively high analyte concentrations examined here (e.g., 1-100 ppm or higher), the absolute area counts increased linearly with the analyte amount only in APCI, making this method more attractive for quantitative liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) applications. Nevertheless, a wider range of ionic compounds can be detected by ESI than by APCI.  相似文献   

6.
Attachment of anions to sorbitol and fructose has been shown to enhance sensitivity in both electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization (APCI) mass spectrometry. The post-column addition of CHCl3 produced Cl-adducts of sorbitol and fructose but their signals were suppressed due to the elevated background. Different chlorinated compounds and different additive methods were systematically investigated to form more abundant Cl-adduct precursor ions and deprotonated product ions. The major causes of the high background were explored and effective methods were developed to improve the signal-to-noise ratios and reproducibility. The compositions of mobile phase, percentages of organic modifiers (MeCN, MeOH and water), columns, oven temperature, flow rates and different gradients were investigated to separate sorbitol from fructose along with their isomers including glucose, galactose, mannose, sorbose, mannitol, and dulcitol. The optimized separation was achieved on a Luna 5 mu NH2 100A column (150 x 4.6 mm) using a mobile phase containing MeCN with 0.1% of CH2Cl2 and 50% MeOH in water at a flow rate of 800 microL/min and an oven temperature of 40 degrees C using a gradient liquid chromatography (LC) system. Human nerve tissue samples were extracted by protein precipitation followed by mixed-mode solid-phase extraction. The LC/ESI-MS/MS method produced higher peak intensities than LC/APCI-MS/MS. However, there were matrix effects from extracted tissues in LC/ESI-MS/MS but not in LC/APCI-MS/MS. Consequently, APCI proved to be the more effective method of ionization. Then the LC/APCI-MS/MS method was fully validated and successfully applied to analysis of clinical samples. The concentrations of endogenous sorbitol and fructose were determined using calibration curves employing sorbitol-13C6 and fructose-13C6 as surrogate analytes. The method has provided excellent intra- and inter-assay precision and accuracy with linear ranges of 0.2-80 ng/mg for sorbitol and 1-400 ng/mg for fructose in human nerve tissues.  相似文献   

7.
Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) based on selected reaction monitoring (SRM) is the standard methodology in quantitative analysis of administered xenobiotics in biological samples. Utilizing two SRM channels during positive electrospray ionization (ESI) LC/MS/MS method development for a drug compound containing two basic functional groups, we found that the response ratio (SRM1/SRM2) obtained using an acidic mobile phase was dramatically different from that obtained using a basic mobile phase. This observation is different from the well-established phenomenon of mobile phase affecting the [M+H](+) response, which is directly related to the amount of the [M+H](+) ions produced during the ionization. Results from follow-up work reported herein revealed that the MS/MS fragmentation patterns of four drug or drug-like compounds are affected not only by the pH, but also by the aqueous-organic ratio of the mobile phase and the buffer concentration at a given apparent pH. The observed phenomenon can be explained by invoking that a mixture of [M+H](+) ions of the same m/z value for the analyte is produced that is composed of two or more species which differ only in the site of the proton attachment, which in turn affects their MS/MS fragmentation pattern. The ratio of the different protonated species changes depending on the pH, aqueous-organic ratio, or ionic strength of the mobile phase used. The awareness of the mobile phase dependency of the MS/MS fragmentation pattern of precursor ions of identical m/z value will influence LC/MS/MS-based bioanalytical method development strategies. Specifically, we are recommending that multiple SRM transitions be monitored during mobile phase screening, with the MS/MS parameters used for each SRM optimized for the composition of the mobile phase (pH, organic percentage, and ionic strength) in which the analyte elutes.  相似文献   

8.
A comparative study of three atmospheric-pressure ionization (API) sources for liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS), namely pneumatically assisted electrospray or ionspray (IS), atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization (APCI), and sonic spray (SS), with respect to the influence of the eluent composition on the ionization of morphine, is presented. The effect of organic modifiers, volatile acids, and buffer systems (with and without pH adjustment) in the LC mobile phase on the ionization efficiency of each interface is described. We conclude that for all three ion sources, the composition of the liquid phase had a serious impact on the ionization of the target compound. For IS and SS, very similar behavior towards the LC eluent was observed. In both cases, an increase in organic modifier resulted in an increase in ionization, while an increasing amount of volatile acid or buffer caused signal suppression. APCI, on the other hand, proved to respond completely differently towards the changes in the eluent. Again, an increased ionization was observed with an increase in organic modifier content but this time also in the presence of mobile phase additives like acids or buffers. Finally, we concluded that APCI proved to be the preferred ion source for the test compound because of its robust character and its direct applicability in traditional LC analysis.  相似文献   

9.
A supercritical fluid chromatography interface probe for atmospheric pressure ionisation mass spectrometry (API-MS) with the advantage of convenient switch between ionisation modes [atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation (APCI) and electrospray ionisation (ESI)] has recently been reported [P.J.R. Sj?berg, K.E. Markides, J. Chromatogr. A, 785 (1997) 101]. In order to obtain a stable ion signal and a low minimum detectable quantity, the design of the spray devise has to be optimised. For easy optimisation in the APCI mode, the corona needle was mounted directly on the interface probe. To compensate for the adiabatic cooling of the expanding mobile phase in the APCI mode, a heated region around the restrictor tip was used. In comparison, ESI required no additional heat, which might also prevent fragmentation for thermolabile compounds. As the mobile phase used was neat CO2, a low flow of make-up liquid was utilised in the ESI mode for transfer of the analytes from the expanding CO2 gas to the liquid phase before ionisation. The low make-up liquid flow in the ESI mode was sufficient for preventing the restrictor from becoming blocked. Factors that influence the ion signal intensity and stability have been studied. In APCI mode, corona needle position, nebuliser gas flow and gas additives were studied and in ESI mode, spray capillary assembly dimension and position, liquid flow-rate and composition were studied. The achievable detection limits were in the 50-0.1 pg (i.e., 290 fmol-140 amol) range. The detection limit in APCI mode was improved by a factor of about 20-25 compared to an earlier design [L.N. Tyrefors, R.X. Moulder, K.E. Markides, Anal. Chem. 65 (1993) 2835].  相似文献   

10.
Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) is applied to the analysis of volatile and thermally stable compounds, while liquid chromatography/atmospheric pressure chemical ionization mass spectrometry (LC/APCI‐MS) and liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LC/ESI‐MS) are preferred for the analysis of compounds with solution acid‐base chemistry. Because organic explosives are compounds with low polarity and some of them are thermally labile, they have not been very well analyzed by GC/MS, LC/APCI‐MS and LC/ESI‐MS. Herein, we demonstrate liquid chromatography/negative ion atmospheric pressure photoionization mass spectrometry (LC/NI‐APPI‐MS) as a novel and highly sensitive method for their analysis. Using LC/NI‐APPI‐MS, limits of quantification (LOQs) of nitroaromatics and nitramines down to the middle pg range have been achieved in full MS scan mode, which are approximately one order to two orders magnitude lower than those previously reported using GC/MS or LC/APCI‐MS. The calibration dynamic ranges achieved by LC/NI‐APPI‐MS are also wider than those using GC/MS and LC/APCI‐MS. The reproducibility of LC/NI‐APPI‐MS is also very reliable, with the intraday and interday variabilities by coefficient of variation (CV) of 0.2–3.4% and 0.6–1.9% for 2,4,6‐trinitrotoluene (2,4,6‐TNT). Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Hydroxylated polybrominated diphenyl ether (OH‐PBDEs) metabolites have the potential to cause endocrine disruption as well as other health effects. Currently, gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) after derivatization is used for the analysis of OH‐PBDEs. However, there is a need for the direct analysis of OH‐PBDEs at relatively low concentrations in environmental and biological samples. Liquid chromatography with atmospheric pressure chemical ionization tandem mass spectrometry (LC/APCI‐MS/MS) was evaluated for the analysis of nine OH‐PBDEs, ranging from tri‐ to hexabrominated. Separation of the nine isomeric metabolites was achieved with reversed‐phase liquid chromatography, followed by detection by APCI‐MS in negative mode. Notably, a significant decrease in ionization was observed in 6‐hydroxyl‐substituted PBDE metabolites in the presence of an ortho‐substituted bromine, relative to the other hydroxylated metabolites. This is probably due to the formation of dioxins in the source as a result of the high‐temperature conditions, which prevented ionization by hydrogen abstraction. The MS/MS experiments also provided evidence of the neutral losses of HBr and Br2, indicating the possible use of neutral loss scanning and selected reaction monitoring (SRM) for the screening of brominated metabolites in samples. The applicability of LC/APCI‐MS/MS was demonstrated for the analysis of metabolites of BDEs 47 and 99 formed in human liver microsomes. The LC/APCI‐MS/MS method was able to detect metabolites that had previously been identified by GC/MS following derivatization. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
The effects of liquid chromatography mobile phase buffer contents on the ionization and fragmentation of drug molecules in liquid chromatographic/ionspray tandem mass spectrometric (LC/MS/MS) determination were evaluated for simvastatin (SV) and its hydroxy acid (SVA). The objective was to improve further the sensitivity for SV by overcoming the unfavorable condition caused by the formation of multiple major adduct ions and multiple major fragment ions when using ammonium as LC mobile phase buffer. Mobile phases (70:30 acetonitrile-buffer, 2 mM, pH 4.5) with buffers made from ammonium, hydrazine or alkyl (methyl, ethyl, dimethyl or trimethyl)-substituted ammonium acetate were evaluated. Q1 scan and product ion scan spectra were obtained for SV in each of the mobile phases under optimized conditions. The results showed that, with the alkylammonium buffers, the alkylammonium-adducted SV was observed as the only major molecular ion, while the formation of other adduct ions ([M + H](+), [M + Na](+) and [M + K](+)) was successfully suppressed. On the other hand, product ion spectra with a single major fragment ion were not observed for any of the alkylammonium-adducted SVs. The affinity of the alkylammoniums to SV and the basicity of the alkylamines are believed to be factors influencing the formation and abundance of molecular and fragment ions, respectively. Methylammonium acetate provided the most favorable condition among all the buffers evaluated and improved the sensitivity several-fold for SV in LC/MS/MS quantitation compared with that obtained using ammonium acetate buffer. Better precision for SV in both Q1 and SRM scans was observed when using methylammonium buffer compared with those using ammonium buffer. The mobile phase buffer contents did not seem to affect the ionization, fragmentation and chromatography of SVA. The results of this evaluation can be applied to similar situations with other organic molecules in ionspray LC/MS/MS determination.  相似文献   

13.
High-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) mass spectrometry was used for the separation and detection of amino acid and peptide enantiomers. With detection limits as low as 250 pg, 25 amino acids enantiomers were baseline resolved on a Chirobiotic T chiral stationary phase. APCI demonstrated an order of magnitude better sensitivity over electrospray ionization (ESI) for free amino acids and low molecular mass peptides at the high LC flow-rates necessary for rapid analysis. As the peptide chain length increased (peptides with M(r) > or = 300 Da), however, ESI proved to be the more ideal atmospheric pressure ionization source. A mobile phase consisting of 1% (w/w) ammonium trifluoroacetate in methanol and 0.1% (w/w) formic acid in water increased the sensitivity of the APCI method significantly. A step gradient was then used to separate simultaneously all 19 native protein amino acid enantiomers in less than 20 min using extracted ion chromatograms.  相似文献   

14.
In liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) of 1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (RDX), attachment of an anion to the analyte molecule is the major way of producing characteristic ions under electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) conditions. The formation of RDX cluster ions in LC/MS and the origin of the clustering agents have been studied. In order to determine whether the clustering anions originate from self-decomposition of RDX in the source or from impurities in the mobile phase, isotopically labeled RDX ((13)C(3)-RDX and (15)N(6)-RDX) and isotopically labeled glycolic acid, acetic acid, ammonium formate and formaldehyde have been used in order to establish the composition and formation route of RDX adduct ions produced in ESI and APCI sources. The results showed that, in ESI, self-decomposition of RDX plays no role in adduct ion formation; rather, RDX clusters with formate, acetate, hydroxyacetate, and chloride anions present in the mobile phase as impurities at ppm levels. In APCI, part of the RDX molecules decompose yielding NO(2) (-) species which in turn cluster with a second RDX molecule producing abundant [M+NO(2)](-) cluster ions.  相似文献   

15.
This paper describes a comparison between atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) and the recently introduced atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI) interface for the LC–MS determination of idoxifene and its major metabolite, SB245419 (SB19), in human plasma. The results indicate that analyte response in APPI is highly dependent on the solvent composition, especially to water in the mobile phase. Other parameters investigated are the mobile phase flow-rate, the chemical noise, and signal suppression by matrix interferences. APPI appears to be six to eight times more sensitive than APCI for idoxifene and its SB245419 metabolite; the response for the SB245420 metabolite is considerably better than for APCI conditions, but still not sufficient for trace level pharmacokinetic determinations in human plasma. The LOQ for the parent drug and its major metabolite were 10 and 25 ng/ml, respectively, in human plasma. From post-column infusion experiments we conclude that there is little difference in matrix suppression between APCI and APPI. From these studies we suggest APPI may be an additional tool in pharmaceutical LC–MS applications.  相似文献   

16.
The high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) separation methodology employed in the study of polyalkene additive compounds by atmospheric pressure ionization mass spectrometry (API-MS) was undertaken. Both atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) and atmospheric pressure photoionization (APPI) were examined. APPI (including dopant-assisted APPI) was found to be an inferior ionization technique to APCI in all cases. APCI ion responses were found to be highly dependent upon the organic solvent type used in the HPLC separations. Namely, employing a water/methanol gradient in place of a water/acetonitrile or a water/acetone gradient yielded improvements in analyte ion intensities between 2.3- and 52-fold for the liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) experiments. Analyte and mobile phase solvent ionization energies were found to be only partially responsible, whereas mobile phase cluster formation and hydration was also implicated. Mobile phase component modification is demonstrated to be an important consideration when developing new, or modifying existing HPLC separations for use in LC-MS experiments in order to enhance analyte sensitivity for a wide variety of common polyalkene additives.  相似文献   

17.
The applicability of liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) for the detection of the free anabolic steroid fraction in human urine was examined. Electrospray ionization (ESI), atmospheric pressure chemical ionization and atmospheric pressure photoionization methods were optimized regarding eluent composition, ion source parameters and fragmentation. The methods were compared with respect to specificity and detection limit. Although all methods proved suitable, LC/ESI-MS/MS with a methanol-water gradient including 5 mM ammonium acetate and 0.01% acetic acid was found best for the purpose. Multiple reaction monitoring allowed the determination of steroids in urine at low nanogram per milliliter levels. LC/MS/MS exhibited high sensitivity and specificity for the detection of free steroids and may be a suitable technique for screening for the abuse of anabolic steroids in sports.  相似文献   

18.
We have identified in vitro metabolites of bupropion (Wellbutrin®) from incubations with human liver S9 fraction and human liver microsomes based on molecular weight information from full scan experiments using a liquid chromatograph coupled to a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer capable of multi-stage operation (LC/MSn). Preliminary experiments have shown that this instrument provides comparable sensitivity to conventional LC-coupled triple quadrupole instruments for metabolic studies, while allowing detailed structural studies using MSn experiments and routine on-line coupling with high performance liquid chromatography via an external atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) source. The LC/MS analysis of human S9 showed the presence of three isomeric monohydroxylated metabolites of bupropion. These were further characterized in a series of MS/MS experiments which gave characteristic spectra for the three isomers. A minor dihydroxylated species was also identified in the human S9 sample and further characterized in a series of MSn experiments. Detailed structural information was generated by the use of on-line LC/MSn type experiments. We have followed the fragmentation pathways of several molecular ion species in a series of sequential LC/MSn experiments, extending as far as MS6 with scan cycle times of less than 1.5 s. Such experiments have provided insights into the structure of specific fragment ions. Additional metabolic products were identified in the rat liver microsomes incubation sample.  相似文献   

19.
Alternative ionization methods are increasingly being utilized to increase the versatility and selectivity of liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS). One such technique is the practice of using commercially available atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) sources with the corona discharge turned off, a process termed no-discharge APCI (ND-APCI). The relative LC/MS responses for several different classes of veterinary drugs were obtained by using ND-APCI, electrospray ionization (ESI), and APCI. While the ND-APCI-MS and -MSn spectra for these compounds were comparable with ESI, ND-APCI provided advantages in sensitivity and selectivity for some compounds. Drugs that were charged in solution as cations or sodium adducts responded particularly well with this technique. Instrumental parameters such as temperatures, gas and liquid flow rates, and source design were investigated to determine their effect on the process of ND-APCI. This paper explores advantages of using ND-APCI for the determination and confirmation of drug residues that might be found in food matrices, including malachite green residues in fish tissue and avermectin residues in milk.  相似文献   

20.
A liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) method was developed to quantitate and confirm residues of leucomalachite green (LMG) in salmon tissue after their conversion to chromic malachite green (MG) in the extraction process. The method uses no-discharge atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI) in conjunction with an ion-trap instrument to generate product-ion spectra. In the sample preparation procedure, salmon tissue is extracted with acetonitrile/buffer, the LMG residue is partitioned into methylene chloride, the LMG is converted to MG using an organic oxidizing agent, and the MG is isolated on alumina/propylsulfonic acid solid-phase extraction cartridges. The method was validated by fortifying salmon with different levels of LMG, and then detecting the residue as MG The LC/MS conditions, including a comparison of electrospray and no-discharge APCI, were evaluated and optimized. MG was not confirmed in any of the control tissue extracts, and all fortified samples analyzed during validation met the confirmation criteria as described. In addition to providing confirmatory data, this method can provide an alternative method for quantitation of MG in salmon. The recoveries of LMG measured as MG by this LC/MS method, at fortification levels of 1-10 ng/g were very high (86-109%), with low relative standard deviation(RSD) values (6.4-13%). The results agreed very closely with those obtained for the same extracts using an LCNIS procedure, indicating that matrix suppression was not an issue. The presence of LMG in salmon tissue samples fortified at 0.25 ng/g was confirmed by this method, with an average recovery of 70.1% and an RSD of 12.0%. Sample extracts from fish exposed to MG were also analyzed.  相似文献   

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