The quadrupole Orbitrap mass spectrometer (Q Exactive) made a powerful proteomics instrument available in a benchtop format. It significantly boosted the number of proteins analyzable per hour and has now evolved into a proteomics analysis workhorse for many laboratories. Here we describe the Q Exactive Plus and Q Exactive HF mass spectrometers, which feature several innovations in comparison to the original Q Exactive instrument. A low-resolution pre-filter has been implemented within the injection flatapole, preventing unwanted ions from entering deep into the system, and thereby increasing its robustness. A new segmented quadrupole, with higher fidelity of isolation efficiency over a wide range of isolation windows, provides an almost 2-fold improvement of transmission at narrow isolation widths. Additionally, the Q Exactive HF has a compact Orbitrap analyzer, leading to higher field strength and almost doubling the resolution at the same transient times. With its very fast isolation and fragmentation capabilities, the instrument achieves overall cycle times of 1 s for a top 15 to 20 higher energy collisional dissociation method. We demonstrate the identification of 5000 proteins in standard 90-min gradients of tryptic digests of mammalian cell lysate, an increase of over 40% for detected peptides and over 20% for detected proteins. Additionally, we tested the instrument on peptide phosphorylation enriched samples, for which an improvement of up to 60% class I sites was observed.
In mass spectrometry based proteomics, data-independent acquisition (DIA) strategies have the ability to acquire a single dataset useful for identification and quantification of detectable peptides in a complex mixture. Despite this, DIA is often overlooked due to noisier data resulting from a typical five to ten fold reduction in precursor selectivity compared to data dependent acquisition or selected reaction monitoring. We demonstrate a multiplexing technique which improves precursor selectivity five-fold.
Shotgun proteomics is a powerful technology for global analysis of proteins and their post-translational modifications. Here, we investigate the faster sequencing speed of the latest Q Exactive HF mass spectrometer, which features an ultra-high-field Orbitrap mass analyzer. Proteome coverage is evaluated by four different acquisition methods and benchmarked across three generations of Q Exactive instruments (ProteomeXchange data set PXD001305). We find the ultra-high-field Orbitrap mass analyzer to be capable of attaining a sequencing speed above 20 Hz, and it routinely exceeds 10 peptide spectrum matches per second or up to 600 new peptides sequenced per gradient minute. We identify 4400 proteins from 1 μg of HeLa digest using a 1 h gradient, which is an approximately 30% improvement compared to that with previous instrumentation. In addition, we show that very deep proteome coverage can be achieved in less than 24 h of analysis time by offline high-pH reversed-phase peptide fractionation, from which we identify more than 140,000 unique peptide sequences. This is comparable to state-of-the-art multiday, multienzyme efforts. Finally, the acquisition methods are evaluated for single-shot phosphoproteomics, where we identify 7600 unique HeLa phosphopeptides in one gradient hour and find the quality of fragmentation spectra to be more important than quantity for accurate site assignment.
Modern ion trap mass spectrometers are capable of collecting up to 60 tandem MS (MS/MS) scans per second, in theory providing acquisition speeds that can sample every eluting peptide precursor presented to the MS system. In practice, however, the precursor sampling capacity enabled by these ultrafast acquisition rates is often underutilized due to a host of reasons (e.g., long injection times and wide analyzer mass ranges). One often overlooked reason for this underutilization is that the instrument exhausts all the peptide features it identifies as suitable for MS/MS fragmentation. Highly abundant features can prevent annotation of lower abundance precursor ions that occupy similar mass-to-charge (m/z) space, which ultimately inhibits the acquisition of an MS/MS event. Here, we present an advanced peak determination (APD) algorithm that uses an iterative approach to annotate densely populated m/z regions to increase the number of peptides sampled during data-dependent LC-MS/MS analyses. The APD algorithm enables nearly full utilization of the sampling capacity of a quadrupole-Orbitrap-linear ion trap MS system, which yields up to a 40% increase in unique peptide identifications from whole cell HeLa lysates (approximately 53 000 in a 90 min LC-MS/MS analysis). The APD algorithm maintains improved peptide and protein identifications across several modes of proteomic data acquisition, including varying gradient lengths, different degrees of prefractionation, peptides derived from multiple proteases, and phosphoproteomic analyses. Additionally, the use of APD increases the number of peptides characterized per protein, providing improved protein quantification. In all, the APD algorithm increases the number of detectable peptide features, which maximizes utilization of the high MS/MS capacities and significantly improves sampling depth and identifications in proteomic experiments.
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