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Desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) tandem mass spectrometry (MS) is used to assess mutation status of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) in human gliomas. Due to the diffuse nature of gliomas, total gross resection is not normally achieved during surgery, leading to tumor recurrence. The mutation status of IDH has clinical significance due to better prognosis in IDH-mutant patients. The mutant IDH converts alpha-ketoglutaric acid (α-KG) into 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), which accumulates abnormally in cells. Immunohistochemical staining (IHC) and genetic testing, the gold standards, are incompatible with intraoperative applications but DESI tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) can be used to assess the mutation status of IDH enzyme from tissue intraoperatively. Here, on off-line evaluation is made of the performance of two different types of mass spectrometers in characterization of IDH mutation status. The intensity of 2HG is measured against glutamate (Glu), an intrinsic reference molecule, in both tandem MS measurements. In both cases using DESI clear separation between IDH-mutant (mut) and IDH-wildtype (wt) samples ( p < 0.0001) is observed, despite the short analysis time. Due to the higher detection sensitivity, multiple reaction monitoring experiments using a triple quadrupole show slightly better performance compared to product ion MS/MS performed on a simple linear ion trap. Both DESI-MS platforms are capable of providing information on IDH mutation status, which might in future be used at the time of surgery to support decision-making on resection regions, especially at tumor margins.
Desorption electrospray ionization (DESI) tandem mass spectrometry (MS) is used to assess mutation status of isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH) in human gliomas. Due to the diffuse nature of gliomas, total gross resection is not normally achieved during surgery, leading to tumor recurrence. The mutation status of IDH has clinical significance due to better prognosis in IDH-mutant patients. The mutant IDH converts alpha-ketoglutaric acid (α-KG) into 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG), which accumulates abnormally in cells. Immunohistochemical staining (IHC) and genetic testing, the gold standards, are incompatible with intraoperative applications but DESI tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) can be used to assess the mutation status of IDH enzyme from tissue intraoperatively. Here, on off-line evaluation is made of the performance of two different types of mass spectrometers in characterization of IDH mutation status. The intensity of 2HG is measured against glutamate (Glu), an intrinsic reference molecule, in both tandem MS measurements. In both cases using DESI clear separation between IDH-mutant (mut) and IDH-wildtype (wt) samples ( p < 0.0001) is observed, despite the short analysis time. Due to the higher detection sensitivity, multiple reaction monitoring experiments using a triple quadrupole show slightly better performance compared to product ion MS/MS performed on a simple linear ion trap. Both DESI-MS platforms are capable of providing information on IDH mutation status, which might in future be used at the time of surgery to support decision-making on resection regions, especially at tumor margins.
Multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) profiling is a strategy for the exploratory analysis of small molecules and lipids by direct sample injection, ie, without the use of chromatographic separation. It is based on instrument methods that comprise a list of ion transitions (MRMs), in which the precursor ion is the expected ionized m/z of the lipid at its species level, ie, the description of lipid class and number of carbon and double bonds in the fatty acid chain(s), and the product ion is a fragment expected for the lipid class or for the fatty acid neutral loss. The Lipid Maps database is expanding constantly, and therefore the MRM-profiling methods associated with this database need to be continuously updated. Here, we provide a comprehensive overview and the key references for the MRM-profiling methodology and workflow, followed by a step-by-step approach to build MRM-profiling instrument acquisition methods for class-based lipid exploratory analysis based on the Lipid Maps database. The detailed workflow includes (1) importing the list of lipids from the database; (2) for a given class, combining isomeric lipids described at full structural level into 1 entry to obtain the neutral mass at species level; (3) attributing the standard Lipid Maps abbreviated nomenclature for the lipid at its species level; (4) predicting the ionized precursor ions; and (5) adding the expected product ion. We also describe how to simulate the precursor ion for the suspect screening of modified lipids using lipid oxidation and their expected product ions as an example. After determining the MRMs, information about collision energy, dwell time, and other instrument parameters are added to finalize the acquisition method. As an example of final method output, we describe the format for Agilent MassHunter v.B.06 and provide the parameters in which optimization can be performed by lipid class using one or more lipid standards.
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