MS/MS Scan Modes
Transcription
MS/MS Scan Modes
MS/MS Scan Modes Árpád Somogyi • Eötvös University, Budapest April 16, 2012 MS/MS Scan Modes Product Ion Scan Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Neutral Loss Scan Δ Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) 1 Scan modes in a triple quadrupole (QqQ) (one quadrupole shown here) http://www-methods.ch.cam.ac.uk/meth/ms/theory/quadrupole.html Scan 300 Voltage Analyte Mixture 200 RF DC 100 100 200 300 Vm1 m/zm1 Vm2 Vm3 m/zm2 m/zm3 mass spectrum 2 Scan 300 Voltage 200 DC 100 Analyte Mixture RF 100 200 300 Vm1 Vm2 Vm3 100 300100 100 300 200200 300 100 200 300 200 Scan 300 Voltage Analyte Mixture 200 RF DC 100 100 200 300 Vm1 Vm2 Vm3 100 300100 100 300 200200 300 100 200 300 200 3 Scan RF 300 Voltage 200 DC 100 Analyte Mixture 100 200 300 Vm1 Vm2 Vm3 100 300100 100 300 200200 300 100 200 300 200 Select Voltage 200 Analyte Mixture RF DC 100 200 300 Vm2 Desired Analyte m/zm2 mass spectrum 4 Modes of scanning in a Triple Quadrupole (QQQ) Q1 scan or select q2 (gas) rf only Q3 scan or select • Quadrupole is a mass filter • QQQ used in this tutorial to describe scan modes – Q1 and Q3 = analyzers – q2 (middle quadrupole) used for CID (dissociation) • Ways to set quadrupoles: Scan, Select & rf only • Other instruments are used A variety of instruments are used for MS/MS To name a few… 5 QQQ Q3 Q1 q2 Benefits: Simple, ion filter Good for quantification Q-TOF Q1 q2 TOF Benefits: Higher resolution & mass accuracy All ions recorded in parallel Ref: Chemushevich, 2001 6 Q-Linear Ion Trap (Q-trap) q2 Q1 LIT Benefits: Quadrupole-like CID spectra with ion trap sensitivity No ion trap low mass cutoff Ref: Hopfgartner, 2003 LT-Orbitrap (pictured with ETD source) quadrupole Mass linear filter C-trap Ion trap Q1 API ion source orbitrap Orbi q2 HCD collision cell reagent Ion source reagent reagent Benefits: LTQ: Ion trap sensitivity Orbi: High dynamic range & high resolution & mass accuracy 7 Trapping Instruments Q1 Q3 q2 Benefits: Sensitivity MS^n (most) MS/MS Scan Modes Product Ion Scan Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Neutral Loss Scan Δ Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) 8 Product Ion Scan Q1 Select q2 (gas) Q3 Dissociate Scan • Qualitative structural information • Q1 is used to select one m/z • This “parent” ion is dissociated in Q2 (Rf only) – Q2 in “Rf only” mode is high transmission device • • • • Fragments (product ions) are formed by collisions Product ions are scanned through Q3 Prerequisite: Produce an MS spectrum for selection Output = MS/MS spectrum Tandem in Space (QQQ) – Product Ion Scan Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Select one m/z (fixed Vac/Vdc) 9 Tandem in Space (QQQ) – Product Ion Scan Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate Scan Products (collide with gas) (scan Vac/Vdc) MS … select … MS/MS select MS MS/MS 10 MS/MS of a Peptide (YGGFL, m/z = 556.2) b4 425 a/b4 100 YGGFL y3 Relative Intensity 80 y2 556.2 60 40 a4 397 20 y2 279 -H2O 538 y3 336 0 200 300 400 500 600 m/z Multiple stages of MS in a trapping instrument MSn of trocade (a drug metabolism study) MS MS2 MS3 MS4 Ref: Hopfgartner, 2003 11 Product Ion Scans may be Software Controlled • • • • • Goal: collect MS/MS spectra for complex mixtures Complex mixture can be separated by HPLC HPLC linked directly to analyzer by ESI source Mass analyzer collects continuous MS spectra At pre-determined intensity of a precursor ion, MS/MS spectra acquired – Data Dependent acquisition – Dynamic Exclusion = exclude repeats 26.47 Ion Current over 60 min 571.29 MS/MS MS 12 Advantages for product ion scan Select Dissociate Scan NOTES QQQ Q-trap Q-TOF TOF-TOF Ion Trap (3D, LT) ICR Q or Trap-ICR LT-Orbitrap Orbitrap Animation 13 MS/MS Scan Modes Product Ion Scan Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Neutral Loss Scan Δ Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) Precursor Ion Scan • • • • • • • • Q1 q2 (gas) Scan Dissociate Q3 Select Screen for precursor ions that produce a given product ion Q1 is scanned All precursor ions collide with target gas (in CID) Fragments (product ions) are formed Q3 allows transmission of one fragment ion m/z Run as HPLC-MS/MS experiment Prerequisite: Determine expected product ions by MS/MS Output = chromatogram showing time/intensity of precursors of interest and reconstructed spectrum 14 Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Scan Precursors (sequential rf/dc) Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 1 at rf/dc 1 (collide with gas) 15 Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Select fragment at rf/dc 1 (fixed rf/dc ) Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 2 at rf/dc 2 (collide with gas) 16 Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Select fragment at rf/dc 2 (fixed rf/dc ) Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 3 at rf/dc 3 (collide with gas) 17 Precursor Ion Scan – Detection of Q1 Source (gas) Q3 Detector Select fragment at rf/dc 3 (fixed rf/dc ) Precursor Ion Spectrum Reconstructed by software Software stores memory of the rf/dc voltages that coincide with fragments striking the detector! 100 Q1 rf/dc 3 Relative Intensity 80 Q1 rf/dc 2 60 These rf/dc voltages equal specific m/z values 40 20 0 200 300 400 500 600 m/z 18 Precursor ion result – precursor of 436.2 Coming into Q1 In Q1, at one rf/dc ratio, m/z = 842.5 all ions In mixture (TIC) NOT DETECTED Q3 fixed to detect 436.2 m/z = 842.5 Precursor ion is Fragmented in q2 Reconstructed chromatogram m/z = 436.2 total ion Current m/z 842.5 hits the detector Learning Check: FACT SHEET Precursor Ion Scan • Consider identification of a mixture of halogenated compounds by MS/MS • Describe a Precursor Ion Scan that might be used to identify all monohalogenated benzenes in a sample • What is the m/z that hits the detector? • What happens in Q1, q2, Q3? • Draw the spectrum F Br I Cl C 12 Cl 35/37 H 1 Br 79/81 F 19 I 127 19 Learning Check: PROBLEM SOLVER Precursor Ion Scan 1) Calculate the mass of one precursor ion, for example, fluorobenzene _____ carbon @ 12 = _____ _____ hydrogen @ 1 = _____ _____ fluorine @ 19 = _____ Total = _____ 2) Draw a likely fragment ion common to all of these analytes? (assume a simple fragment from M+ is formed) 3) Calculate the mass of the common fragment _____ carbon @ _____ hydrogen @ 12 = _____ 1 = _____ Total = _____ Learning Check: PROBLEM SOLVER Precursor Ion Scan 1) Calculate the mass of one _____ 6 carbon @ 12 = _____ 72 precursor ion, for example, _____ 5 hydrogen @ 1 = _____ 5 fluorobenzene 1 fluorine @ 19 = _____ 19 _____ 96 Total = _____ 2) Draw a likely fragment ion common to all of these analytes? (assume a simple fragment from M+ is formed) 3) Calculate the mass of the common fragment . F+ H H H H H _____ 6 carbon @ 12 = _____ 72 _____ 5 hydrogen @ 1 = _____ 5 Total = _____ 77 20 Learning Check: Precursor Ion Scan .+ H 6 Carbon @ 12 = 72 5 hydrogen @ 1 = 5 H • What happens in Q1 q2 Q3? Q1 q2 • Draw the spectrum H Q3 sequential CID Cl Br FI H m/z = 77 • What m/z hits the detector? Scan all ions H Fix: m/z 77 96 112 156/158 204 114 Relative Intensity 77 19 204 77 77+ ++127 35 79= ===96 112 156 0 50 100 m/z 150 200 Precursor Ion Scan: A literature example Combinatorial Chemistry • Combinatorial libraries result from the simultaneous synthesis of a great number of compounds. – analytical challenge to characterize • Purpose: Determine purity and identity of pooled library • QQQ mass spectrometer PROBLEM: MS SCAN IS COMPLEX AND PROVIDES LITTLE INFORMATION Triolo, 2001 21 Precursor Ion Scan: A literature example Combinatorial Chemistry • The compound components X, Y, Z are not identified – mass of X = 299 Library compounds: – mass of Y = 40 X-AA1-Y-AA2-Z – mass of Z = 100 • Library compounds, example if AA1 = Arg, AA2 = Ala: – X-Arg-Y-Ala-Z [mass of Arg = 156, Ala = 71] – mass: 299 + 156 + 40 + 71 + 100 = 666 – for mass spectrometry, add 1 proton to form ion: 666 + 1 = 667 • When AA1 = Arg, a fragment will form, m/z = 455 m/z = 455 X-Arg-Y-AA2-Z Triolo, 2001 Learning Check: FACT SHEET Precursor Ion Scan in Combinatorial Chemistry Alanine Arginine Asparagine Aspartic Acid Cystein Glutamic Acid Glutamine Glycine Histidine Isoleucine Leucine Lysine Methionine Phenylalanine Proline Serine Threonine Tryptophan Tyrosine Valine ALA ARG ASN ASP CYS GLU GLN GLY HIS ILE LEU LYS MET PHE PRO SER THR TRP TYR VAL 71 156 114 115 103 129 128 57 137 113 113 128 131 147 97 87 101 186 163 99 R X Sum ? AA1 Y AA2 Z 299 156 40 ? 100 455 140 + ? 595 + AA2 + 1 = Precursor Mass Library compounds: X-AA1-Y-AA2-Z A fragment ion will form for cleavage at this bond when aa1 = Arginine m/z = 455 X-AA1-Y-AA2-Z 22 Learning Check: precursor scan results Precursor ARG [M+H]+ 653 667 683 693 695 697 709 710 711 724 725 727 733 743 752 759 AA1 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 156 X 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 299 ? Y H+ 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 40 1 AA2 Z 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 The precursor ion results of this experiment are shown in the left column find the amino acid for each of these compounds Learning Check: FACT SHEET Precursor Ion Scan in Combinatorial Chemistry • Consider identification of a mixture of these library compounds by MS/MS • Describe a Precursor Ion Scan that might be used to determine that all amino acids are represented in position 2 in the compounds (AA2) if position 1 = Arg • What is the m/z that hits the detector? • What happens in Q1, q2, Q3? • Draw the spectrum Library compounds: X-AA1-Y-AA2-Z A fragment ion will form for cleavage at this bond when aa1 = Arginine m/z = 455 X-AA1-Y-AA2-Z 23 Learning Check: Precursor Ion Scan in Combinatorial Chemistry m/z = 455 • What m/z hits the detector? X-Arg-+ (299) + (156) • What happens in Q1, q2, Q3? Q1 q2 Scan all ions Q3 sequential CID Gly Pro Fix: m/z 455 Phe • Draw the X-Arg-Y-Gly-Z X-Arg-Y-Pro-Z X-Arg-Y-Phe-Z spectrum (299+156+40+57+100 +1 = 653) for a few 600 650 700 750 800 compounds m/z Precursor Ion Scan of m/z 455 of a pooled library MS Precursor Scan Ref: Triolo, 2001 24 Advantages for precursor scan Scan Select Dissociate NOTES QQQ Q-trap Q-TOF TOF-TOF Ion Trap (3D, LT) ICR Q or Trap-ICR LT-Orbitrap MS/MS Scan Modes Product Ion Scan Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Neutral Loss Scan Δ Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) 25 Neutral Loss Scan Q1 q2 (gas) Q3 Δ Scan • • • • • • • • Dissociate Scan (offset from Q1) Screen for ions that undergo a common loss Q1 and Q3 are both scanned Q3 is offset by the neutral loss selected The precursor ion collides in q2 forming fragments Compounds providing the selected loss are detected Run as HPLC-MS/MS experiment Prerequisite: Determine expected loss by MS/MS Output = chromatogram showing time/intensity of precursors of interest and reconstructed spectrum Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Scan Precursors (sequential rf/dc) 26 Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 1 (collide with gas) Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Scan for offset m/z (Offset rf/dc) 27 Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 2 (collide with gas) Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Scan for offset m/z (Offset rf/dc) 28 Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate rf/dc 3 (collide with gas) Neutral Loss Scan Loss of m/z = Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Scan for offset m/z (Offset rf/dc) 29 Neutral Loss Spectrum Reconstructed by software Software stores memory of the rf/dc voltages that coincide with fragments striking the detector! 100 Q1 offset rf/dc 2 Relative Intensity 80 The rf/dc voltages equals a specific m/z value 60 40 20 0 200 300 400 500 600 m/z Learning Check: Neutral Loss Scan • Consider identification of a mixture of halogenated compounds by MS/MS • Describe a Neutral Loss Scan that might be used to identify all Chlorine containing compounds • What is the m/z that hits the detector? • What happens in Q1, q2, Q3? • Draw the spectrum F Br I Cl C 12 Cl 35/37 H 1 Br 79/81 F 19 I 127 30 Learning Check: Neutral Loss Scan • What m/z hits the detector? • What happens in Q1 q2 Q3? Q1 q2 • Draw the spectrum Q3 Relative Intensity 0 50 100 m/z 150 200 Learning Check: Neutral Loss Scan .+ H H H H Neutral loss of 35 or 37 m/z of Q1 less 35 • What m/z hits the detector? for example: chloro-benzene:112-35 = 77 • What happens in Q1 q2 Q3? Q1 q2 Q3 scan offset 35 amu sequential CID Scan all ions H 112 Cl + -35 • Draw the spectrum Relative Intensity 0 50 100 m/z 150 200 31 Neutral Loss Scan: A literature example Drug Metabolite • Early stages in design of a drug metabolism study • Want to “Fish out” relevant metabolites • Metabolites are in human urine after administration of tolcapone – tolcapone is a catechol-O-methyl transferase inhibitor • Possible metabolite is a glucoronide of tolcapone – metabolites are structurally related to parent drug – but, product ion spectra may be energy dependent tolcapone Hopfgartner, 2003 Neutral Loss Scan: A literature example Drug Metabolite researchers expect a metabolite that is a glucuronide of tolcapone tolcapone Mass = 273 Expected conjugate: mass 273 = tolcapone 176 = glucuronide add’n 449 OH O HO OH O HO OH tolcapone glucoronide Mass = 449 glucuronide conjugates commonly provide mass loss of 176 32 Neutral Loss Scan: A literature example Q-trap (Q3 = Linear ion trap) Hopfgartner, 2003 Metabolite of tolcapone:LC-MS/MS Analysis of human urine TIC of neutral loss of 176 Da m/z (Neg ion): tolcapone conjugate = 449 loss of H = -1 neutral loss spectrum at t = 5.8 min MS/MS spectrum 30 eV same fragments as MS/MS of tolcapone MS/MS spectrum 50 eV Hopfgartner, 2003 33 Advantages for neutral loss scan Scan Dissociate Scan NOTES QQQ Q-trap Q-TOF TOF-TOF Ion Trap (3D, LT) ICR Q or Trap-ICR LT-Orbitrap MS/MS Scan Modes Product Ion Scan Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Neutral Loss Scan Δ Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) 34 Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM or MRM) Q1 Select • • • • • • • • q2 (gas) Q3 Dissociate Select Single (SRM) or Multiple (MRM) reaction monitoring Quantitative target analyte scan Q1 is fixed to allow transmission of one precursor m/z This precursor ion collides in q2 forming fragments Q3 is fixed to allow transmission of one fragment m/z Run as HPLC-MS/MS experiment Prerequisite: Determine expected product ions by MS/MS Output = chromatogram showing time/intensity of precursors of interest and reconstructed spectrum Selected Reaction Monitoring Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Select one m/z (fixed Vac/Vdc) 35 Selected Reaction Monitoring Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Dissociate (collide with gas) Selected Reaction Monitoring Source Q1 (gas) Q3 Detector Select one m/z (Fixed rf/dc) 36 Learning Check: Selected Ion Monitoring F • Consider identification of a mixture of halogenated compounds by MS/MS • Describe a SRM Scan that might be used to identify fluorobenzene • What is the m/z that hits the detector? • What happens in Q1, q2, Q3? • Draw the spectrum Br I Cl C 12 Cl 35/37 H 1 Br 79/81 F 19 I 127 Learning Check: Selected Ion Monitoring m/z = 77 H H H • What m/z hits the detector? H • What happens in Q1 q2 Q3? Q1 q2 Q3 CID Fix: m/z 96 .+ H Fix: m/z 77 96 F • Draw the spectrum Relative Intensity 0 50 100 m/z 150 200 37 MRM example: Detection of an antiviral drug and it’s metabolite in human plasma • herpes virus replication inhibited by action of acyclovir but low bioavailability • valacyclovir metabolizes to acylovir with high bioavailability • Goal: accurate detection in plasma • QQQ mass spectrometer, MDS SCIEX API-4000 • Studied fragmentation of compounds by CID acyclovir (ACV) fluconazole (internal std - IS) valacyclovir (VCV) Ref: Yadav, 2009 Product ion mass spectra VCV 325.2/152.2 ACV 226.2/152.2 IS 307.1/220.3 38 MRM chromatograms VCV & IS in plasma VCV ACV IS blank IS only VCV & IS plasma VCV & IS plasma (subject) Mean pharmacokinetic profile after oral administration of 1000 mg VCV tablet to 41 healthy subjects Ref: Yadav, 2009 39 MRM example: Improve Sensitivity for Corticosteroid Detection • Used illegally as growth promoters in cattle • Purpose: detect low residue levels in biological matrices • QQQ mass spectrometer (QuattroLC, Micromass) • Studied fragmentation of corticosteroids by CID – Determined negative mode to produce more specific ions • Evaluated 3 acquisition methods in negative mode – Product ion – Neutral loss – Multiple reaction monitoring Ref: Antignac, 2000 Improving Sensitivity for Corticosteroid Detection 40 Comparison: Product Ion, Neutral Loss, MRM 1 ng Total ion current Chromatograms 100 pg Neutral Loss 10X more sensitive than MS/MS 10 pg MRM 10X more sensitive than N.Loss blank Ref: Antignac, 2000 Improving Sensitivity for Corticosteroid Detection MRM = best method requires setting many transitions for mixture analysis Q1 set for multiple [M+acetate]Q3 set for 2 products of each (-60 and -30 from M+acet]- 41 MRM chromatograms of mixture of 11 steroids Advantages for selected ion monitoring Select Dissociate Select NOTES QQQ Q-trap Q-TOF TOF-TOF Ion Trap (3D, LT) ICR Q or Trap-ICR LT-Orbitrap 42 MS/MS Scan Modes Summary Product Ion Scan Qualitative Structural Information Select Dissociate Scan Scan Dissociate Select Scan Dissociate Scan Select Dissociate Select Precursor Ion Scan Screen for compound types that lose a detectable fragment Neutral Loss Scan Screen for compound types that lose a neutral Selected Reaction Monitoring (SRM) Identify specific compounds MS/MS Scan Modes Strategy: Phosphorylation of serine, threonine or tyrosine 16+16+16+31 = 79 phosphorylation added to serine: 79-1+2 = 80 serine could be lost from serine (as an ion): 79 (PO3-) C 12 H 1 O 16 P 31 could be lost from serine (as a neutral): 80 + 18 (H2O)= 98 threonine tyrosine 43 Suggested Reading List & References Precursor Ion and Neutral Loss Scans Hopfgartner G., Husser C., Zell M.; Rapid Screening and characterization of drug metabolites using a new quadrupole-linear ion trap mass spectrometer, JMS, 2003; 38: 138-150. Triolo A, Altamura, M., Cardinali, F., Sisto, A., Maggi C., Mass spectrometry and combinatorial chemistry: a short outline, JMS, 2002; 36:1249-1259. Chemushevich, I.V., Loboda A.V., Thomson B.A., An introduction to quadrupole – time-of-flight mass spectrometry, JMS, 2001, 36:849-865. Multiple Reaction Monitoring Antignac, J.P., Bizec, B.L., Monteau, F., Poulain, F., Andre, F., Collision-induced dissociation of corticosteroids in electrospray tandem mass spectrometry and development of a screening method by high performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry, RCMS, 2000, 14, 33-39. Yadav, M., Upadhyay, V., Singhal, P., Goswami, S., Shhrivastav, P.S., Stability evaluation and sensitive determination of antiviral drug, valacyclovir and its metabolite acyclovir in human plasma by a rapid liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry method, J.Chrom.B, 2009, 877(8-9), 680-688 44