| Literature DB >> 27983674 |
Daniel A Dias1, Oliver A H Jones2, David J Beale3, Berin A Boughton4, Devin Benheim5, Konstantinos A Kouremenos6, Jean-Luc Wolfender7, David S Wishart8.
Abstract
Although significant advances have been made in recent years, the structural elucidation of small molecules continues to remain a challenging issue for metabolite profiling. Many metabolomic studies feature unknown compounds; sometimes even in the list of features identified as "statistically significant" in the study. Such metabolic "dark matter" means that much of the potential information collected by metabolomics studies is lost. Accurate structure elucidation allows researchers to identify these compounds. This in turn, facilitates downstream metabolite pathway analysis, and a better understanding of the underlying biology of the system under investigation. This review covers a range of methods for the structural elucidation of individual compounds, including those based on gas and liquid chromatography hyphenated to mass spectrometry, single and multi-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and high-resolution mass spectrometry and includes discussion of data standardization. Future perspectives in structure elucidation are also discussed; with a focus on the potential development of instruments and techniques, in both nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and mass spectrometry that, may help solve some of the current issues that are hampering the complete identification of metabolite structure and function.Entities:
Keywords: Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy; mass spectrometry; metabolite profiling; metabolomics; nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy; structure elucidation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27983674 PMCID: PMC5192452 DOI: 10.3390/metabo6040046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Metabolites ISSN: 2218-1989
Figure 1Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) of aqueous metabolites extracted from a sample of Daphnia magna. Complex overlapping peaks can be observed even in a shift range of just 0.5–5 ppm.
Figure 2Section of a 1H NMR of soil extract (black) overlaid with NMR spectra of lactate (red) and valine (blue).
Figure 32D COSY 1H spectra of the Daphia sample from Figure 1 illustrating cross peaks.
List of common mass analyzers and instrument configurations detailing: mass resolution, approximate mass range, tandem MS/MS capabilities and acquisition speed. TOF = Time of Flight, TOF/TOF = Tandem TOF, IT = Ion Trap, FT-ICR = Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance, Q-TOF = Quadrupole Time of Flight, Da = Dalton.
| Mass Analyzer | Mass Resolution | Mass Range (Da) | MS/MS | MSn | Acquisition Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quadrupole | ~1000 | 50–6000 | Yes | No | Medium |
| Ion Trap | ~1000 | 50–4000 | Yes | Yes | Medium |
| TOF | 2500–40,000 | 20–500,000 | No | No | Fast |
| TOF/TOF | >20,000 | 20–500,000 | Yes | No | Fast |
| Orbitrap | >100,000 | 40–4000 | Yes | Yes | Slow |
| FT-ICR | >200,000 | 10–10,000 | Yes | Yes | Slow |
| Ion Mobility Q-TOF | 13,000/40,000 | Up to 40,000 | Yes | No | Fast |
Figure 4Identification of molecular formula using uHRMS in combination with isotopic fine structure: (A) Full Scan MS+ spectra for a glutathione standard showing three calculated formula matches within 2 ppm mass error; (B) Expansion of m/z 309.07–309.13 showing M + 1 isotopologues and inability to determine parent formula; (C) Expansion of m/z 310.06–310.13 showing M + 2 isotopologues with calculated isotopic fine structure match of 34S, 18O and 13C2 isotopologues to C10H17N3O6S matching the glutathione standard, other formula fine structures do not match the same isotopologue profile.
Figure 5Dereplication and identification strategy using Liquid Chromatography Mass Spectrometry: (A) Reverse Phase ESI+ Total Ion Chromatogram with overlaid Extracted Molecular Features of Canola Extract; (B) Extracted Ion Chromatogram of the molecular formula corresponding to the plant hormone methyl jasmonate with inlaid Find-by-Formula Spectrum showing observed and predicted isotopic abundance for the feature at 9.880–9.965 min; (C) Product Ion spectra of methyl jasmonate using collision voltage of 20.0 eV; (D) Spectral match of methyl jasmonate MS/MS spectra to the METLIN Database allowing Putative identification.
Figure 6Comparison between the FTIR Response Spectra of E. coli and L. innocua at the surfactants concentrations of N-tetradecyltropinium bromide that resulted in 100% mortality. Note: a.u. stands for “arbitrary units”. Arrows correspond to the wavenumbers referred to peptidoglycan while circles to the wavenumbers referred to the major response peaks in each species. Blue, L. innocua; Red, E. coli. The synthetic stress of the metabolomic stress response are defined by the following FTIR regions: fatty acids (W1) from 3000 to 2800 cm−1, amides (W2) from 1800 to 1500 cm−1, mixed region (W3) from 1500 to 1200 cm−1, carbohydrates (W4) from 1200 to 900 cm−1 and typing region (W5) from 900 to 700 cm−1. Adapted from Corte et al. [125].
Basic principles for FTIR metabolite elucidation.
| Does the FTIR spectra have a Carbonyl (C=O) band? Strong band at 1820–1660 cm−1 | Yes | Acid | • Look for indications that an O–H band is present (broad absorption near 3300–2500 cm−1; will overlap the C–H stretch near 3000 cm−1). |
| • Look for indications that a C–O single bond is present (1100–1300 cm−1). | |||
| • Carbonyl band (near 1725–1700 cm−1). | |||
| Ester | • Look for C–O absorption (medium intensity near 1300–1000 cm−1. There will be no O–H band (3600–3300 cm−1). | ||
| Aldehyde | • Look for aldehyde e type C–H absorption bands (two weak absorptions to the right of the C–H stretch near 2850 cm−1 and 2750 cm−1). | ||
| • Carbonyl band (near 1740–1720 cm−1). | |||
| Ketone | • The weak aldehyde C–H absorption bands will be absent. | ||
| • Carbonyl band (near 1725–1705 cm−1). | |||
| No | Alcohol | • Look for OH band (broad adsorption at 3600–3300 cm−1). | |
| • Look for C–O absorption band (near 1300–1000 cm−1). | |||
| Alkene | • Look for weak absorption near 1650 cm−1 for a double bond. | ||
| • Look for CH stretch band near 3000 cm−1. | |||
| Aromatic | • Look for the benzene double bonds (medium to strong absorptions near 1650–1450 cm−1). | ||
| • The CH stretch band is much weaker than in alkenes. | |||
| Alkane | • The main absorption will be the C–H stretch near 3000 cm−1. | ||
| • Look for another band near 1450 cm−1. | |||
| Alkyl bromide | • Look for the C–H stretch near 3000 cm−1. | ||
| • Look for another band to the right of 667 cm−1. |