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1.
Liquid chromatography (LC) electron transfer dissociation (ETD) tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) of protein digests is demonstrated in a hybrid quadrupole‐hexapole orthogonal time‐of‐flight (OTOF) mass spectrometer. Analyte ions are selected in a mass‐analyzing quadrupole, accumulated in the hexapole linear ETD reaction cell and mutually stored with ETD reagent anions. Product ions are collected in an ion cooler and then analyzed by an OTOF mass analyzer. The hexapole structure of the ETD reaction cell allows for a broad fragment ion mass range distribution and a high ion storage capacity. Analytically useful ETD OTOF‐MS/MS spectra could be obtained at a rate of faster than 2 Hz. When used in conjunction with LC this high speed allows for several MS and MS/MS spectra to be obtained across each LC peak. An MS scan is used to select the precursor ions. With a 1 m flight tube and single reflection, resolutions of about 10 k and a mass accuracy of 5 ppm were achieved. When analyzing a 100 fmol solution of a tryptic digest of bovine serum albumin (BSA) by LC/ETD MS/MS, 27 unique peptides were identified with a summed Mascot score of 1316 using the Swiss Prot database. In addition, we explored the capability for analyzing small proteins with the present hybrid instrument. ETD MS/MS of intact ubiquitin ([M+12H]12+) leads to the identification of the protein with a Mascot score of 264. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
A new hybrid electrospray quadrupole Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) instrument design is shown and characterized. This instrument involves coupling an electrospray source and mass-resolving quadrupole, ion accumulation, and collision cell linear ion trap system developed by MDS Sciex with a home-built ion guide and ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) cell. The iterative progression of this design is shown. The final design involves a set of hexapole ion guides to transfer the ions from the accumulation/collision trap through the magnetic field gradient and into the cell. These hexapole ion guides are separated by a thin gate valve and two conduction limits to maintain the required <10(-9) mbar vacuum for FTICR. Low-attomole detection limits for a pure peptide are shown, 220 000 resolving power in broadband mode and 820 000 resolving power in narrow-band mode are demonstrated, and mass accuracy in the <2 ppm range is routinely available provided the signal is abundant, cleanly resolved, and internally calibrated. This instrument design provides high experimental flexibility, allowing Q2 CAD, SORI-CAD, IRMPD, and ECD experiments with selected ion accumulation as well as experiments such as nozzle skimmer dissociation. Initial top-down mass spectrometry experiments on a protein is shown using ECD.  相似文献   

3.
Doubly protonated peptides that undergo an electron transfer reaction without dissociation in a linear ion trap can be subjected to beam-type collisional activation upon transfer from the linear ion trap into an adjacent mass analyzer, as demonstrated here with a hybrid triple quadrupole/linear ion trap system. The activation can be promoted by use of a DC offset difference between the ion trap used for reaction and the ion trap into which the products are injected of 12-16 V, which gives rise to energetic collisions between the transferred ions and the collision/bath gas employed in the linear ion trap used for ion/ion reactions. Such a process can be executed routinely on hybrid linear ion trap/triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometers and is demonstrated here with several model peptides as well as a few dozen tryptic peptides. Collisional activation of the peptide precursor ions that survive electron transfer frequently provides structural information that is absent from the precursor ions that fragment spontaneously upon electron transfer. The degree to which additional structural information is obtained by collisional activation of the surviving singly charged peptide ions depends upon peptide size. Little or no additional structural information is obtained from small peptides (<8 residues) due to the high electron transfer dissociation (ETD) efficiencies noted for these peptides as well as the extensive sequence information that tends to be forthcoming from ETD of such species. Collisional activation of the surviving electron transfer products provided greatest benefit for peptides of 8-15 residues.  相似文献   

4.
An electron injection system based on an indirectly heated ring-shaped dispenser cathode has been developed and installed in a 7 Tesla Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer. This new hardware design allows high-rate electron capture dissociation (ECD) to be carried out by a hollow electron beam coaxial with the ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) trap. Infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) can also be performed with an on-axis IR-laser beam passing through a hole at the centre of the dispenser cathode. Electron and photon irradiation times of the order of 100 ms are required for efficient ECD and IRMPD, respectively. As ECD and IRMPD generate fragments of different types (mostly c, z and b, y, respectively), complementary structural information that improves the characterization of peptides and proteins by FTICR mass spectrometry can be obtained. The developed technique enables the consecutive or simultaneous use of the ECD and IRMPD methods within a single FTICR experimental sequence and on the same ensemble of trapped ions in multistage tandem (MS/MS/MS or MS(n)) mass spectrometry. Flexible changing between ECD and IRMPD should present advantages for the analysis of protein digests separated by liquid chromatography prior to FTICRMS. Furthermore, ion activation by either electron or laser irradiation prior to, as well as after, dissociation by IRMPD or ECD increases the efficiency of ion fragmentation, including the w-type fragment ion formation, and improves sequencing of peptides with multiple disulfide bridges. The developed instrumental configuration is essential for combined ECD and IRMPD on FTICR mass spectrometers with limited access into the ICR trap.  相似文献   

5.
A new ion source has been developed for Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTICRMS) that enables quick changes between matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization (ESI) modes. When operating as an ESI source, the sample solution is sprayed through an angled nebulizer. The generated ions pass through a glass capillary followed by a skimmer and three sequential hexapole ion guides. Ions can be accumulated in the third hexapole (storage hexapole) before they are injected into the ICR trap. The second hexapole is mounted on a movable platform which also carries the MALDI sample plate. During the switch from ESI to MALDI, this platform moves the second hexapole out of the hexapole series and locates a MALDI sample plate with 384 sample positions into the area directly in front of the storage hexapole. The storage hexapole is in a medium pressure chamber (MPC) which has windows both for the incoming laser beam and for the observation optics, as well as a gas tube for pulsing collision gas into the chamber. During the MALDI operation the focused laser beam enters the MPC, passes between the hexapole rods and irradiates a MALDI sample on the target plate. The sample molecules are desorbed/ionized into the storage hexapole and simultaneously cooled by collisions with the pulsed gas. Ions desorbed from multiple laser shots can be accumulated in this hexapole before they are transferred to the ICR trap. With the combined ion source a computer-controlled switch between MALDI and ESI modes is possible in less than a minute, depending on the position of the MALDI target on the 384-spot plate. Immediate acquisition of mass spectra is possible after mode switching without the need for tuning or re-calibration.  相似文献   

6.
Electrospray ionization (ESI) in combination with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometry provides for mass analysis of biological molecules with unrivaled mass accuracy, resolving power and sensitivity. However, ESI FTICR MS performance with on-line separation techniques such as liquid chromatography (LC) and capillary electrophoresis has to date been limited primarily by pulsed gas assisted accumulation and the incompatibility of the associated pump-down time with the frequent ion beam sampling requirement of on-line chromatographic separation. Here we describe numerous analytical advantages that accrue by trapping ions at high pressure in the first rf-only octupole of a dual octupole ion injection system before ion transfer to the ion trap in the center of the magnet for high performance mass analysis at low pressure. The new configuration improves the duty cycle for analysis of continuously generated ions, and is thus ideally suited for on-line chromatographic applications. LC/ESI FTICR MS is demonstrated on a mixture of 500 fmol of each of three peptides. Additional improvements include a fivefold increase in signal-to-noise ratio and resolving power compared to prior methods on our instrument.  相似文献   

7.
The dynamic range of Fourier transform ion cyclotron mass spectrometry (FTICR) is typically limited by the useful charge capacity of an FTICR cell (to approximately 10(6) to 10(7) elementary charges) and the minimum number of ions required to produce a useful signal (approximately 10(2) elementary charges). We show that the expansion of the dynamic range by 2 orders of magnitude can be achieved by preselecting lower abundance species in a quadrupole interface to an electrospray ionization (ESI) source. Ion preselection is then followed by ion accumulation in external to the FTICR cell a linear (2-D) quadrupole trap and subsequent transfer to the region of high magnetic field for gated trapping in the FTICR cell. Two modes of ion preselection, using either the quadrupole filtering mode or rf-only dipolar excitation, were studied and mass resolutions of 30 to 100 were achieved for selective external ion accumulation of peptides and proteins with molecular weights ranging from 500 to 17,000 Da. The ability to selectively eject the most abundant species before trapping in the FTICR has enormous practical benefits for increasing the sensitivity and dynamic range of measurements.  相似文献   

8.
Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometers function such that the ion accumulation event takes place in a region of higher pressure outside the magnetic field which allows ions to be thermally cooled before being accelerated toward the ICR cell where they are decelerated and re-trapped. This transfer process suffers from mass discrimination due to time-of-flight effects. Also, trapping ions with substantial axial kinetic energy can decrease the performance of the FTICR instrument compared with the analysis of thermally cooled ions located at the trap center. Therefore, it is desirable to limit the energy imparted to the ions which results in lower applied trap plate potentials and reduces the spread in axial kinetic energy. The approach presented here for ion transfer, called restrained ion population transfer or RIPT, is designed to provide complete axial and radial containment of an ion population throughout the entire transfer process from the accumulation region to the ICR cell, eliminating mass discrimination associated with time-of-flight separation. This was accomplished by use of a number of quadrupole segments arranged in series with independent control of the direct current (DC) bias voltage applied to each segment of the quadrupole ion guide. The DC bias voltage is applied in such a way as to minimize the energy imparted to the ions allowing transfer of ions with low kinetic energy from the ion accumulation region to the ICR cell. Initial FTICR mass spectral data are presented that illustrate the feasibility of RIPT. A larger m/z range for a mixture of peptides is demonstrated compared with gated trapping. The increase in ion transfer time (3 ms to 130 ms) resulted in an approximately 11% decrease in the duty cycle; however this can be improved by simultaneously transferring multiple ion populations with RIPT. The technique was also modeled with SIMION 7.0 and simulation results that support our feasibility studies of the ion transfer process are presented.  相似文献   

9.
Retarding grid and Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometry variable trap potential measurements are performed to determine factors that contribute to the kinetic energy distribution of ions formed in an electrospray source that uses a heated capillary for desolvation. The control of ion kinetic energies is achieved by manipulating the skimmer position in the postcapillary expansion and by varying the potential appEed to the skimmer. The selective generation of either charge-dependent or charge-independent ion energy distributions is demonstrated. Charge-dependent energy distributions of electro-sprayed ions are created by sampling ions near the Mach disk of the supersonic expansion and by using a larger diameter skimmer orifice; the FTICR spectra acquired under these conditions exhibit mass-to-charge ratio-dependent mass discrimination determined by the potential used to trap the ions. Charge-independent energies of electrosprayed ions are created by positioning the capillary adjacent to the skimmer to sample thermal ions and by using a smaller skimmer orifice to reduce expansion cooling; under these conditions ion kinetic energy is determined primarily by the skimmer potential and no mass-to-charge ratio-dependence is observed in the selection of optimum FTICR trapping conditions. The ability to select between proteins of different conformation on the basis of kinetic energy differences is demonstrated. For example, a 0.4 V difference in trap potential is observed in the selective trapping of open and closed forms of the +10 charge state of lysozyme. Finally, it is demonstrated that by operating the source under conditions which deliver a beam of ions with charge-independent energies to the cell, it is possible to obtain precursor and product ion signal magnitudes in FTTCR spectra without charge-dependent mass discrimina-tion.  相似文献   

10.
The high resolution, mass range and sensitivity of Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) suggest that it could be a valuable tool for the quantitative analysis of biomolecules. To determine the applicability of electrospray ionization combined with FTMS to the quantitation of biomolecules in multi-component samples, mixtures of varying compositions and concentrations of cytochrome c, angiotensin II, insulin and chicken egg white lysozyme were examined. The instrument used has an electrospray source with a hexapole trap to accumulate ions for injection into an ion cyclotron resonance mass analyzer. Linear responses for single component samples of angiotensin II and insulin were in the range 0.031-3 microM and those of both cytochrome c and lysozyme were between 0.031 and 1 microM. In examining various mixtures of the proteins with angiotensin II, it was found that the presence of the large molecules suppresses the signal of the smaller molecules. This is suggested to be a result of ion-ion interactions producing selective ion loss from either the hexapole trap or the ion cyclotron resonance mass analyzer trap. More massive, more highly charged ions can collisionally transfer large amounts of translational energy to smaller, less highly charged ions, ejecting the smaller ions from the trap. Mass discrimination effects resulting from the trapping voltage were also examined. It was found that relative signal intensities of ions of different masses depend on trapping voltage for externally produced ions. The effect is most significant for spectra including masses that differ by 30% or more. This suggests that for quantitation all samples and standards be run at a constant trapping potential.  相似文献   

11.
A sensitive, integrated top-down liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) approach, suitable for the near complete characterization of specific proteins in complex protein mixtures, such as inclusion bodies of an E. coli lysate, has been successfully developed using a hybrid linear ion trap/Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer. In particular, human growth hormone (hGH) (200 fmol) was analyzed with high sequence coverage (>95%), including the sites of disulfide linkages. The high mass accuracy and resolution of the FTICR mass spectrometer was used to reveal high charge state ions of hGH (22 kDa). The highly charged intact protein ions (such as the 17+ species) were captured and fragmented in the linear ion trap cell. The fragment ions from MS/MS spectra were then successfully analyzed in the FTICR cell in an on-line LC/MS run. Peptide fragments from the N-terminal and C-terminal regions, as well as large interior fragments, were captured and identified. The results allowed the unambiguous assignment of disulfide bonds Cys53-Cys165 and Cys182-Cys189, indicative of proper folding of hGH. The disulfide bond assignments were also confirmed by analysis of the tryptic digest of a sample of hGH purified from inclusion bodies. On-line LC/MS with the linear ion trap/FTICR yields high mass accuracy in both the MS and MS/MS modes (within 2 ppm with external calibration). The approach should prove useful in biotechnology applications to characterize correctly folded proteins, both in the early protein expression and the later processed stages, using only a single automated on-line LC/MS top-down method.  相似文献   

12.
We decoupled electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) and collision-induced dissociation of charge-reduced species (CRCID) events to probe the lifetimes of intermediate radical species in ETD-based ion trap tandem mass spectrometry of peptides. Short-lived intermediates formed upon electron transfer require less energy for product ion formation and appear in regular ETD mass spectra, whereas long-lived intermediates require additional vibrational energy and yield product ions as a function of CRCID amplitude. The observed dependencies complement the results obtained by double-resonance electron-capture dissociation (ECD) Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) and ECD in a cryogenic ICR trap. Compared with ECD FT-ICR MS, ion trap MS offers lower precursor ion internal energy conditions, leading to more abundant charge-reduced radical intermediates and larger variation of product ion abundance as a function of vibrational post-activation amplitude. In many cases decoupled CRCID after ETD exhibits abundant radical c-type and even-electron z-type ions, in striking contrast to predominantly even-electron c-type and radical z-type ions in ECD FT-ICR MS and especially activated ion-ECD, thus providing a new insight into the fundamentals of ECD/ETD.  相似文献   

13.
We propose a tandem mass spectrometry method that combines electron-transfer dissociation (ETD) with simultaneous collision-induced dissociation (CID), termed ETD/CID. This technique can provide more complete sequence coverage of peptide ions, especially those at lower charge states. A selected precursor ion is isolated and subjected to ETD. At the same time, a residual precursor ion is subjected to activation via CID. The specific residual precursor ion selected for activation will depend upon the charge state and m/z of the ETD precursor ion. Residual precursor ions, which include unreacted precursor ions and charge-reduced precursor ions (either by electron-transfer or proton transfer), are often abundant remainders in ETD-only reactions. Preliminary results demonstrate that during an ETD/CID experiment, b, y, c, and z-type ions can be produced in a single experiment and displayed in a single mass spectrum. While some peptides, especially doubly protonated ones, do not fragment well by ETD, ETD/CID alleviates this problem by acting in at least one of three ways: (1) the number of ETD fragment ions are enhanced by CID of residual precursor ions, (2) both ETD and CID-derived fragments are produced, or (3) predominantly CID-derived fragments are produced with little or no improvement in ETD-derived fragment ions. Two interesting scenarios are presented that display the flexibility of the ETD/CID method. For example, smaller peptides that show little response to ETD are fragmented preferentially by CID during the ETD/CID experiment. Conversely, larger peptides with higher charge states are fragmented primarily via ETD. Hence, ETD/CID appears to rely upon the fundamental reactivity of the analyte cations to provide the best fragmentation without implementing any additional logic or MS/MS experiments. In addition to the ETD/CID experiments, we describe a novel dual source interface for providing front-end ETD capabilities on a linear ion trap mass spectrometer.  相似文献   

14.
A rare example of ion/ion reaction between species of like polarity was shown to take place during the transfer of metal cations from nucleic acid substrates to chelating agents in the gas phase. Gaseous anionic reactants were generated from separate solutions of analyte and chelator by using a dual nanospray setup. The respective multiply charged ions shared the same path and were allowed to react for a predetermined interval in an rf-only hexapole before high-resolution analysis by Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometry. Efficient transfer of sodium and magnesium ions was readily observed with significant reduction of the nonspecific adducts that are typically associated with decreased sensitivity and resolution in the analysis of nucleic acid samples. Metal cations were abstracted from the initial analyte without being replaced by protons, in a process that was clearly dependent on the concentration of chelator in the auxiliary emitter and on the time spent by the reactants in the hexapole element. A survey of the properties of selected anionic chelators showed that their known affinity for a target cation in solution was more critical than their maximum anionic charge in determining the outcome of the transfer process. The analysis of selected assemblies requiring divalent cations to preserve their structural integrity and functional properties demonstrated that ion/ion reactions were clearly capable of discriminating between nonspecific interactions and specific coordination based on transfer susceptibility. These examples demonstrated that the ability to selectively eliminate nonspecific adducts in the gas phase, after the desolvation process is complete, offers a unique opportunity for studying specific metal binding in biological systems without resorting to separation procedures that may adversely affect the position of binding equilibria in solution and disrupt the assemblies under investigation.  相似文献   

15.
De novo sequencing of peptides using tandem MS is difficult due to missing fragment ions in the spectra commonly obtained after CID of peptide precursor ions. Complementing CID spectra with spectra obtained in an ion‐trap mass spectrometer upon electron transfer dissociation (ETD) significantly increases the sequence coverage with diagnostic ions. In the de novo sequencing algorithm CompNovo presented here, a divide‐and‐conquer approach was combined with an efficient mass decomposition algorithm to exploit the complementary information contained in CID and ETD spectra. After optimizing the parameters for the algorithm on a well‐defined training data set obtained for peptides from nine known proteins, the CompNovo algorithm was applied to the de novo sequencing of peptides derived from a whole protein extract of Sorangium cellulosum bacteria. To 2406 pairs of CID and ETD spectra contained in this data set, 675 fully correct sequences were assigned, which represent a success rate of 28.1%. It is shown that the CompNovo algorithm yields significantly improved sequencing accuracy as compared with published approaches using only CID spectra or combined CID and ETD spectra.  相似文献   

16.
In this work we describe a micro-electrospray ionization source equipped with an atmospheric pressure external ion shutter. The solenoid-activated shutter prevents the electrospray plume from entering the inlet capillary unless triggered to the 'open' position. When in the 'closed' position, a stable electrospray plume is maintained between the electrospray ionization (ESI) emitter and the electrically isolated face of the shutter. When the shutter is triggered, a 'slice' of ions is allowed to enter the inlet capillary and is subsequently accumulated in an external ion reservoir comprised of a radio frequency only (rf-only) hexapole and a pair of electrostatic elements. Following ion accumulation in the external ion reservoir, intact molecular ions of proteins, oligonucleotides, and noncovalent complexes can be stored for extended intervals (>30 minutes) prior to being transferred to the Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) trapped ion cell for mass analysis. By introducing reactive gases directly into the external ion reservoir during the storage interval, ion-molecule reactions, such as H/D exchange, can be performed at high effective pressures. This scheme obviates the need for the long reaction times and delays associated with restoring base pressure in the trapped ion cell and allows H/D exchange reactions to be conducted in a fraction of the time required using conventional in-cell exchange approaches. The back face of the shutter arm contains an elastomeric material which can be positioned to seal the inlet to the mass spectrometer resulting in lower base pressure in the ion reservoir and the FTICR cell. Additionally, it is noted that blocking the ESI plume during non-accumulation events results in reduced fouling of the source electrodes and longer times between required source cleaning.  相似文献   

17.
A new matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) source for Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FTMS) has been developed. The new source is equipped with a hexapole ion guide. The sample on the laser target is one millimeter from the hexapole ion guide, so that ions are desorbed directly into the guide. A device for pulsing collision gas in direct proximity to the laser target makes it possible to cool the ions, which have a kinetic energy spread of several electron volts when produced by the MALDI process. These ions are trapped in the hexapole where positive potentials at the laser target and at an extraction plate help trap ions along the longitudinal axis. After a pre-defined trapping time the voltage of the extraction plate is reversed and the trapped ions are extracted for transmission to the ion cyclotron resonance cell. Accumulation of ions from multiple laser shots in the hexapole before mass spectrometric analysis increases sensitivity. Preliminary sensitivity studies with substance P show that 10 attomoles of analyte applied on the target can be detected with a signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio >15.  相似文献   

18.
Rapid gas-phase hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange from D(2)O and ND(3) into oligonucleotide and protein ions was achieved during storage in a hexapole ion reservoir. Deuterated gas is introduced through a capillary line that discharges directly into the low-pressure region of the reservoir. Following exchange, the degree of H-D exchange is determined using Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry. Gas-phase H-D exchange experiments can be conducted more than 100 times faster than observed using conventional in-cell exchange protocols that require lower gas pressures and additional pump-down periods. The short experimental times facilitate the quantitation of the number of labile hydrogens for less reactive proteins and structured oligonucleotides. For ubiquitin, we observe approximately 65 H-D exchanges after 20 s. Exchange rates of > 250 hydrogens s(-1) are observed for oligonucleotide ions when D(2)O or ND(3) is admitted directly into the external ion reservoir owing to the high local pressure in the hexapole. Partially deuterated oligonucleotide ions have been fragmented in the reservoir using infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD). The resulting fragment ions show that exchange predominates at charged sites on the 5'- and 3'-ends of the oligonucleotide, whereas exchange is slower in the core. This hardware configuration is independent of the mass detector and should be compatible with other mass spectrometric platforms including quadrupole ion trap and time-of-flight mass spectrometers.  相似文献   

19.
The gas-phase structures of protein ions have been studied by electron transfer dissociation (ETD) and collision-induced dissociation (CID) after electrospraying these proteins from native-like solutions into a quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer. Because ETD can break covalent bonds while minimally disrupting noncovalent interactions, we have investigated the ability of this dissociation technique together with CID to probe the sites of electrostatic interactions in gas-phase protein ions. By comparing spectra from ETD with spectra from ETD followed by CID, we find that several proteins, including ubiquitin, CRABP I, azurin, and β-2-microglobulin, appear to maintain many of the salt bridge contacts known to exist in solution. To support this conclusion, we also performed calculations to consider all possible salt bridge patterns for each protein, and we find that the native salt bridge pattern explains the experimental ETD data better than nearly all other possible salt bridge patterns. Overall, our data suggest that ETD and ETD/CID of native protein ions can provide some insight into approximate location of salt bridges in the gas phase.
Figure
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20.
Initial results obtained using a new electrospray ionization (ESI) Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) mass spectrometer operated at a magnetic field 11.5 tesla are presented. The new instrument utilized an electrostatic ion guide between the ESI source and FTICR trap that provided up to 5% overall transmission efficiency for light ions and up to 30% efficiency for heavier biomolecules. The higher magnetic field in combination with an enlarged FTICR ion trap made it possible to substantially improve resolving power and operate in a more robust fashion for large biopolymers compared to lower field instruments. Mass resolution up to 106 has been achieved for intermediate size biopolymers such as bovine ubiquitin (8.6 kDa) and bovine cytochrome c (12.4 kDa) without the use of frequency drift correction methods. A mass resolution of 370,000 has been demonstrated for isotopically resolved molecular ions of bovine serum albumin (66.5 kDa). Comparative measurements were made with the same spectrometer using a lower field 3.5-tesla magnet allowing the performance gains to be more readily quantified. Further improvements in pumping capacity of the vacuum system and efficiency of ion transmission from the source are expected to lead to further substantial sensitivity gains.  相似文献   

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