The utility of adding ion mobility (IM) to liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) for quantitation of 25hydroxyvitamin D 3 (25OHD3) is evaluated. Sodiated 25OHD3 ions adopt both closed and open conformations, whereas the stereoisomer 3-epi-25-hydroxyvitamin D (epi25OHD), when sodiated, adopts only a closed gas-phase conformation. The unique open conformation for sodiated 25OHD3 permits unambiguous quantitation. Nonetheless, the ratio of open versus closed gas-phase conformations for sodiated 25OHD3 can vary with instrumental conditions; conversion from the open to the closed conformer is attributed to radio frequency (rf) heating within the ion accumulation trap. Ion heating becomes significant when space charge in the trap forces ions to larger radii where the rf field is higher. To avoid biasing quantitation, an isotopically labeled internal standard must be used to account for changes in conformer ratio. Thirty-three serum extract samples were evaluated by LC/IM-MS and were found to not be biased by changes in ion conformer ratios, permitting reliable quantitation of 25OHD3 without interference from the epimer.
Quantitation of the
serum concentration of 25-hydroxyvitamin D
is a high-demand assay that suffers from long chromatography time
to separate 25-hydroxyvitamin D from its inactive epimer; however,
ion mobility spectrometry can distinguish the epimer pair in under
30 ms due to the presence of a unique extended or “open”
gas-phase sodiated conformer, not shared with the epimer, reducing
the need for chromatographic separation. Five ion mobility mass spectrometers
utilizing commercially available IMS technologies, including drift
tube, traveling wave, trapped, and high-field asymmetric ion mobility
spectrometry, are evaluated for their ability to resolve the unique
open conformer. Additionally, settings for each instrument are evaluated
to understand their influence on ion heating, which can drive the
open conformer into a compact or “closed” conformer
shared with the epimer. The four low-field instruments successfully
resolved the open conformer from the closed conformer at baseline
or near-baseline resolution at typical operating parameters. High-field
asymmetric ion mobility was unable to resolve a unique peak but detected
two peaks for the epimer, in contrast to the low-field methods that
detected one conformer. This study seeks to expand the instrument
space by highlighting the potential of each platform for the separation
of 25-hydroxyvitamin D epimers.
Ion mobility-mass spectrometry is a useful tool in separation of biological isomers, including clinically relevant analytes such as 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25OHD3) and its epimer, 3-epi-25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (epi25OHD3). Previous research indicates that these epimers adopt different gas-phase sodiated monomer structures, either the "open" or "closed" conformer, which allow 25OHD3 to be readily resolved in mixtures. In the current work, alternative metal cation adducts are investigated for their relative effects on the ratio of "open" and "closed conformers. Alkali and alkaline earth metal adducts caused changes in the 25OHD3 conformer ratio, where the proportion of the "open" conformer generally increases with the size of the metal cation in a given group. As such, the ratio of the "open" conformer, which is unique to 25OHD3 and absent for its epimer, can be increased from approximately 1:1 for the sodiated monomer to greater than 8:1 for the barium adduct. Molecular modeling and energy calculations agree with the experimental results, indicating that the Gibbs free energy of conversion from the "closed" to the "open" conformation decreased with increasing cation size, correlating with the variation in ratio between the conformers. This work demonstrates the effect of cation adducts on gas-phase conformations of small, flexible molecules and offers an additional strategy for resolution of clinically relevant epimers.
Ion mobility was
integrated with liquid chromatography/high resolution
mass spectrometry (LC/IM-HRMS) to quantify 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD)
in human serum. It has previously been shown that 25OHD adopts two
gas-phase conformations which are resolved using ion mobility; in
contrast, the inactive epimer, 3-epi-25-hydroxyvitamin D (epi25OHD),
only adopts one. Interference from epi25OHD was eliminated by filtering
the chromatogram to retain the drift time that corresponds to the
unique gas-phase conformation of 25OHD. Although ion mobility separates
the epimers, some chromatography is required to separate compounds
which interfere with ionization or fall at the same nominal m/z. Standards were prepared in 4% albumin
solutions and compared against commercial serum quality controls.
Standards and quality controls were analyzed and validated using a
2 min LC/IM-MS method. 25-Hydroxyvitamin D3 and D2 were quantified
over the range between 2 and 500 ng/mL with bias and precision within
15%. When epi25OHD was spiked into quality control samples, no significant
bias was introduced, and analysis of 30 patient samples shows good
agreement between this LC/IM-MS and traditional LC/MS/MS methods.
This work shows that ion mobility can be incorporated with liquid
chromatography and mass spectrometry for rapid quantitation of 25OHD
in human serum.
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