Literature DB >> 25152309

Continuous water infusion enhances atmospheric pressure chemical ionization of methyl chloroformate derivatives in gas chromatography coupled to time-of-flight mass spectrometry-based metabolomics.

Christian J Wachsmuth1, Katja Dettmer, Sven A Lang, Maria E Mycielska, Peter J Oefner.   

Abstract

The effects of continuous water infusion on efficiency and repeatability of atmospheric pressure chemical ionization of both methyl chloroformate (MCF) and methoxime-trimethylsilyl (MO-TMS) derivatives of metabolites were evaluated using gas chromatography-time-of-flight mass spectrometry. Water infusion at a flow-rate of 0.4 mL/h yielded not only an average 16.6-fold increase in intensity of the quasimolecular ion for 20 MCF-derivatized metabolite standards through suppression of in-source fragmentation but also the most repeatable peak area integrals. The impact of water infusion was the greatest for dicarboxylic acids and the least for (hetero-) aromatic compounds. Water infusion also improved the ability to detect reliably fold changes as small as 1.33-fold for the same 20 MCF-derivatized metabolite standards spiked into a human serum extract. On the other hand, MO-TMS derivatives were not significantly affected by water infusion, neither in their fragmentation patterns nor with regard to the detection of differentially regulated compounds. As a proof of principle, we applied MCF derivatization and GC-APCI-TOFMS to the detection of changes in abundance of metabolites in pancreatic cancer cells upon treatment with 17-DMAG. Water infusion increased not only the number of metabolites identified via their quasimolecular ion but also the reproducibility of peak areas, thereby almost doubling the number of significantly regulated metabolites (false discovery rate < 0.05) to a total of 23.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25152309     DOI: 10.1021/ac502133r

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  6 in total

Review 1.  Review of recent developments in GC-MS approaches to metabolomics-based research.

Authors:  David J Beale; Farhana R Pinu; Konstantinos A Kouremenos; Mahesha M Poojary; Vinod K Narayana; Berin A Boughton; Komal Kanojia; Saravanan Dayalan; Oliver A H Jones; Daniel A Dias
Journal:  Metabolomics       Date:  2018-11-17       Impact factor: 4.290

2.  Analysis of Grape Volatiles Using Atmospheric Pressure Ionization Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry-Based Metabolomics.

Authors:  Manoj Ghaste; Fulvio Mattivi; Giuseppe Astarita; Vladimir Shulaev
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

3.  Humidity Effects on Fragmentation in Plasma-Based Ambient Ionization Sources.

Authors:  G Asher Newsome; Luke K Ackerman; Kevin J Johnson
Journal:  J Am Soc Mass Spectrom       Date:  2015-09-18       Impact factor: 3.109

4.  A data preprocessing strategy for metabolomics to reduce the mask effect in data analysis.

Authors:  Jun Yang; Xinjie Zhao; Xin Lu; Xiaohui Lin; Guowang Xu
Journal:  Front Mol Biosci       Date:  2015-02-02

5.  Cross-platform mass spectrometry annotation in breathomics of oesophageal-gastric cancer.

Authors:  Sung-Tong Chin; Andrea Romano; Sophie L F Doran; George B Hanna
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-03-23       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Development of an Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization Interface for GC-MS.

Authors:  Christian Lipok; Florian Uteschil; Oliver J Schmitz
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2020-07-16       Impact factor: 4.411

  6 in total

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