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Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Paglia, G; Angel, P; Williams, JP; Richardson, K; Olivos, HJ; Thompson, JW; Menikarachchi, L; Lai, S; Walsh, C; Moseley, A; Plumb, RS ...
Published in: Anal Chem
January 20, 2015

Despite recent advances in analytical and computational chemistry, lipid identification remains a significant challenge in lipidomics. Ion-mobility spectrometry provides an accurate measure of the molecules' rotationally averaged collision cross-section (CCS) in the gas phase and is thus related to ionic shape. Here, we investigate the use of CCS as a highly specific molecular descriptor for identifying lipids in biological samples. Using traveling wave ion mobility mass spectrometry (MS), we measured the CCS values of over 200 lipids within multiple chemical classes. CCS values derived from ion mobility were not affected by instrument settings or chromatographic conditions, and they were highly reproducible on instruments located in independent laboratories (interlaboratory RSD < 3% for 98% of molecules). CCS values were used as additional molecular descriptors to identify brain lipids using a variety of traditional lipidomic approaches. The addition of CCS improved the reproducibility of analysis in a liquid chromatography-MS workflow and maximized the separation of isobaric species and the signal-to-noise ratio in direct-MS analyses (e.g., "shotgun" lipidomics and MS imaging). These results indicate that adding CCS to databases and lipidomics workflows increases the specificity and selectivity of analysis, thus improving the confidence in lipid identification compared to traditional analytical approaches. The CCS/accurate-mass database described here is made publicly available.

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Published In

Anal Chem

DOI

EISSN

1520-6882

Publication Date

January 20, 2015

Volume

87

Issue

2

Start / End Page

1137 / 1144

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Spectrometry, Mass, Secondary Ion
  • Signal-To-Noise Ratio
  • Lipids
  • Humans
  • Chromatography, Liquid
  • Brain
  • Analytical Chemistry
  • Aged
  • 4004 Chemical engineering
  • 3401 Analytical chemistry
 

Citation

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Paglia, G., Angel, P., Williams, J. P., Richardson, K., Olivos, H. J., Thompson, J. W., … Astarita, G. (2015). Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification. Anal Chem, 87(2), 1137–1144. https://doi.org/10.1021/ac503715v
Paglia, Giuseppe, Peggi Angel, Jonathan P. Williams, Keith Richardson, Hernando J. Olivos, J Will Thompson, Lochana Menikarachchi, et al. “Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification.Anal Chem 87, no. 2 (January 20, 2015): 1137–44. https://doi.org/10.1021/ac503715v.
Paglia G, Angel P, Williams JP, Richardson K, Olivos HJ, Thompson JW, et al. Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification. Anal Chem. 2015 Jan 20;87(2):1137–44.
Paglia, Giuseppe, et al. “Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification.Anal Chem, vol. 87, no. 2, Jan. 2015, pp. 1137–44. Pubmed, doi:10.1021/ac503715v.
Paglia G, Angel P, Williams JP, Richardson K, Olivos HJ, Thompson JW, Menikarachchi L, Lai S, Walsh C, Moseley A, Plumb RS, Grant DF, Palsson BO, Langridge J, Geromanos S, Astarita G. Ion mobility-derived collision cross section as an additional measure for lipid fingerprinting and identification. Anal Chem. 2015 Jan 20;87(2):1137–1144.
Journal cover image

Published In

Anal Chem

DOI

EISSN

1520-6882

Publication Date

January 20, 2015

Volume

87

Issue

2

Start / End Page

1137 / 1144

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Spectrometry, Mass, Secondary Ion
  • Signal-To-Noise Ratio
  • Lipids
  • Humans
  • Chromatography, Liquid
  • Brain
  • Analytical Chemistry
  • Aged
  • 4004 Chemical engineering
  • 3401 Analytical chemistry