2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.cbpa.2017.10.018
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The potential of Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry for high-throughput and high-resolution lipidomics

Abstract: Lipids are a large and highly diverse family of biomolecules, which play essential structural, storage and signalling roles in cells and tissues. Although traditional mass spectrometry (MS) approaches used in lipidomics are highly sensitive and selective, lipid analysis remains challenging due to the chemical diversity of lipid structures, multiple isobaric species and incomplete separation using many forms of chromatography. Ion mobility (IM) separates ions in the gas phase based on their physicochemical prop… Show more

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Cited by 88 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…Hence, LC techniques for the separation of lipid mixtures have received widespread attention and many preeminent comprehensive reviews on MS‐based lipidomics techniques have been published (Cajka & Fiehn, 2014; Lv, Shi, Wang, & Xu, 2019). In addition, ion mobility spectrometry as a scalable analytical separation technique orthogonal to LC has gained attention and can enhance separations by separating isomeric lipids (Hinz, Liggi, & Griffin, 2018).…”
Section: The Analysis Workflow Of Ms‐based Lipidomicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, LC techniques for the separation of lipid mixtures have received widespread attention and many preeminent comprehensive reviews on MS‐based lipidomics techniques have been published (Cajka & Fiehn, 2014; Lv, Shi, Wang, & Xu, 2019). In addition, ion mobility spectrometry as a scalable analytical separation technique orthogonal to LC has gained attention and can enhance separations by separating isomeric lipids (Hinz, Liggi, & Griffin, 2018).…”
Section: The Analysis Workflow Of Ms‐based Lipidomicsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(15) where c is a constant depending on the voltages used in the transfer optics (obtained from the MassLynx software; note that the resulting corrections are typically of the order of 100 μs in measured drift times of several ms, and uncertainties in the determination of c therefore have a small effect on the final measurement). The derived CCS′ versus t′ data are fitted using an empirically determined power law, 202 CCS′ = A t' N (16) its linearized version, 198 ln CCS' = ln A + N  ln t' (17) or a polynomial 67 CCS′ = A t' 2 + B t' + C…”
Section: V533 Quality Control After Calibrationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2006, the availability of IM-MS instrumentation from a major MS manufacturer marked the onset of a growing use of IM for the separation, identification, and structural characterization of analytes across diverse fields of science. These include: ionic clusters, [4][5][6][7][8] catalysts, 9,10 supramolecular complexes, [11][12][13][14] small organic molecules including drugs, 15,16 lipids 17,18 and other metabolites, [19][20][21] glycans, [22][23][24] peptides, [25][26][27] proteins, [28][29][30] synthetic polymers, [31][32][33] biomolecules 34,35 and biomolecular complexes [36][37][38] (native IM-MS). However, as IM-MS instruments now commercially available from different manufacturers operate according to different principles of ion mobility separation, 39 this introduces complexity-and potentially confusion-amongst practitioners and readers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An example of this is the popularization of LC‐IMS‐MS that combines different separation modes allowing the analysis of highly complex samples. This is a promising tool in fields such as lipidomics in which samples may contain multiple isobaric lipid species . These new options will broaden the possibility of using these multidimensional techniques in the different omics sciences.…”
Section: Guidelines and Prospectsmentioning
confidence: 99%