2007
DOI: 10.1002/rcm.2996
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MSE with mass defect filtering for in vitro and in vivo metabolite identification

Abstract: Metabolite identification studies involve the detection and structural characterization of the biotransformation products of drug candidates. These experiments are necessary throughout the drug discovery and development process. The use of high-resolution chromatography and high-resolution mass spectrometry together with data processing using mass defect filtering is described for in vitro and in vivo metabolite identification studies. Data collection was done using UPLC coupled with an orthogonal hybrid quadr… Show more

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Cited by 243 publications
(188 citation statements)
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“…The mass detection conditions were optimized according to our previous work . The precision and reproducibility of peak integration was good for the final results and the ability to collect the MS and MS/MS data in one analytical run was clearly demonstrated (Kevin et al 2007) and the sampling rate is sufficient to provide an accurate representation of the chromatographic separation.…”
Section: Mass Detection Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…The mass detection conditions were optimized according to our previous work . The precision and reproducibility of peak integration was good for the final results and the ability to collect the MS and MS/MS data in one analytical run was clearly demonstrated (Kevin et al 2007) and the sampling rate is sufficient to provide an accurate representation of the chromatographic separation.…”
Section: Mass Detection Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The mass detection conditions were optimized according to our previous work . The precision and reproducibility of peak integration was good for the final results and the ability to collect the MS and MS/MS data in one analytical run was clearly demonstrated (Kevin et al 2007) and the sampling rate is sufficient to provide an accurate representation of the chromatographic separation.The accurate mass measurement and MS/MS analysis of saponins in this study was performed at different collision energies ranging from 5 to 40 eV with MS E (E represents low-high collision energy) approach ) in order to provide sufficient information necessary to distinguish saponins with the same molecular weight, accurate MS and available standards were used to verify these important marker ions. Mass measurement of the TOF mass spectrometer (Chan et al 2007) with a group of known low-molecule-weight (between 100 and 1,500 m/z) compounds was determined according to our previous work .…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In this way, two mass chromatograms are generated, one with information on the intact molecules from the first function, and the other with the fragmented ion information from the second function. A variety of data-processing algorithms can be used to extract metabolite information from these data [12,13]. In other words, MS E can provide parallel alternating scans for acquisition at either low collision energies to obtain precursor ion information or high collision energies to obtain full-scan accurate mass fragment, precursor ion, and small neutral molecules.…”
Section: Uplc-ms Techniquementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The collision energy ramp causes fragmentation of molecules as they pass the collision cell. The MS E mode provides precursor and product ion information for every detectable component in the mixture (Bateman et al 2007). Leucine enkephalin ([M + H] + 556.2771) was utilized for lock mass correction.…”
Section: Uplc-esi-qtof-ms Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%