Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) enables the spatial distributions of molecules possessing different mass‐to‐charge ratios to be mapped within complex environments revealing regional changes at the molecular level. Even at high mass resolving power, however, these images often reflect the summed distribution of multiple isomeric molecules, each potentially possessing a unique distribution coinciding with distinct biological function(s) and metabolic origin. Herein, this chemical ambiguity is addressed through an innovative combination of ozone‐induced dissociation reactions with MSI, enabling the differential imaging of isomeric lipid molecules directly from biological tissues. For the first time, we demonstrate both double bond‐ and sn‐positional isomeric lipids exhibit distinct spatial locations within tissue. This MSI approach enables researchers to unravel local lipid molecular complexity based on both exact elemental composition and isomeric structure directly from tissues.
We report a method that enables automated data-dependent acquisition of lipid tandem mass spectrometry data in parallel with a high-resolution mass spectrometry imaging experiment. The method does not increase the total image acquisition time and is combined with automatic structural assignments. This lipidome-per-pixel approach automatically identified and validated 104 unique molecular lipids and their spatial locations from rat cerebellar tissue.
Coupling laser post-ionisation with a high resolving power MALDI Orbitrap mass spectrometer has realised an up to ∼100-fold increase in the sensitivity and enhanced the chemical coverage for MALDI-MS imaging of lipids relative to conventional MALDI. This could constitute a major breakthrough for biomedical research.
Visualizing the distributions
of drugs and their metabolites is
one of the key emerging application areas of matrix-assisted laser
desorption/ionization–mass spectrometry imaging (MALDI-MSI)
within pharmaceutical research. The success of a given MALDI-MSI experiment
is ultimately determined by the ionization efficiency of the compounds
of interest, which in many cases are too low to enable detection at
relevant concentrations. In this work we have taken steps to address
this challenge via the first application of laser-postionisation coupled
with MALDI (so-called MALDI-2) to the analysis and imaging of pharmaceutical
compounds. We demonstrate that MALDI-2 increased the signal intensities
for 7 out of the 10 drug compounds analyzed by up to 2 orders of magnitude
compared to conventional MALDI analysis. This gain in sensitivity
enabled the distributions of drug compounds in both human cartilage
and dog liver tissue to be visualized using MALDI-2, whereas little-to-no
signal from tissue was obtained using conventional MALDI. This work
demonstrates the vast potential of MALDI-2-MSI in pharmaceutical research
and drug development and provides a valuable tool to broaden the application
areas of MSI. Finally, in an effort to understand the ionization mechanism,
we provide the first evidence that the preferential formation of [M
+ H]
+
ions with MALDI-2 has no obvious correlation with
the gas-phase proton affinity values of the analyte molecules, suggesting,
as with MALDI, the occurrence of complex and yet to be elucidated
ionization phenomena.
Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization, MALDI, has been increasingly used in a variety of biomedical applications, including tissue imaging of clinical tissue samples, and in drug discovery and development. These studies strongly depend on the performance of the analytical instrumentation and would drastically benefit from improved sensitivity, reproducibility, and mass/spatial resolution. In this work, we report on a novel combined MALDI/ESI interface, which was coupled to different Orbitrap mass spectrometers (Elite and Q Exactive Plus) and extensively characterized with peptide and protein standards, and in tissue imaging experiments. In our approach, MALDI is performed in the elevated pressure regime (5-8 Torr) at a spatial resolution of 15-30 μm, while ESI-generated ions are injected orthogonally to the interface axis. We have found that introduction of the MALDI-generated ions into an electrodynamic dual-funnel interface results in increased sensitivity characterized by a limit of detection of ∼400 zmol, while providing a mass measurement accuracy of 1 ppm and a mass resolving power of 120 000 in analysis of protein digests. In tissue imaging experiments, the MALDI/ESI interface has been employed in experiments with rat brain sections and was shown to be capable of visualizing and spatially characterizing very low abundance analytes separated only by 20 mDa. Comparison of imaging data has revealed excellent agreement between the MALDI and histological images.
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