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Dr. A. K. YADAV Assistant Professor-Chemistry Maharana Pratap Govt. P.G. College, Hardoi Principles Of Mass Spectrometry The mass spectrometer is an instrument designed to separate gas phase ions according to their m/z (mass to charge ratio) value. Mass spectrometers are used in industry and academia for both routine and research purposes. The following list is just a brief summary of the major mass spectrometric applications: ☞Chemistry: Structural characterisation of natural and synthetic compounds ☞•Biotechnology: the analysis of proteins, peptides, oligonucleotides ☞•Pharmaceutical: drug discovery, combinatorial chemistry, pharmacokinetics, drug metabolism ☞•Clinical: neonatal screening, haemoglobin analysis, drug testing ☞•Environmental: PAHs, PCBs, water quality, food contamination ☞•Geological: oil composition, carbon dating Mass Spectrometry (or MS) is a way to ‘weigh’ individual molecules or individual atoms. The mass of these tiny particles is microscopic. A molecule of water, for example, weighs about 10-22 grams ( i.e.,0.0000000000000000000001g). A mass spectrometer is an instrument that measures the masses of individual molecules that have been converted into ions, i.e., molecules that have been electrically charged. Since molecules are so small, it is not convenient to measure their masses in kilograms, or grams, or pounds. In fact, the mass of a single hydrogen atom is approximately 1.66 X 10-24 grams. We therefore need a more convenient unit for the mass of individual molecules. This unit of mass is often referred to by chemists and biochemists as the Dalton (Da for short), and is defined as follows: 1 Da=(1/12) of the mass of a single atom of the isotope of carbon-12(12C). This follows the accepted convention of defining the 12C isotope as having exactly 12 mass units. Mass-to-Charge Ratio, m/z • The charge of an ion is defined by z, which is the fundamental unit of charge on an ion ( 1.6 x 10-19C). Therefore, m/z is the Daltons per unit charge (Th, Thomson). • If a molecule weighs 1000 Da, the [M+H]+ ion of that molecule will appear at 1001 Da, but the doubly charged ion of the same compound [M+2H]2+ will appear at m/z 501. The mass spectrometer also includes •A vacuum system •Tools to introduce the sample (LC, GC …) •Tools to produce the gas phase ions from the sample molecules •Tools to fragment the ions, in order to obtain structural information, or to get more selective detection • An analyzer to separate the ions •A detection system •Software and computing Schematic of Mass Spectrometer System • An ion source is a device that vaporises and puts charge on the molecules. • Ion sources are available for just about all atoms and molecules- from very small and medium sized ones, e.g., atmospheric gases, respiratory gases, drugs, to extremely large molecules like proteins and DNA. • • Electron Ionization (EI) Chemical Ionization (CI) – Desorption Chemical Ionization (DCI) • • Field Desorption (FD) Field Ionization (FI) • • Fast Atom Bombardment (FAB) Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) Electrospray Ionization (ESI) Atmospheric Pressure Chemical Ionization (APCI) Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption Ionization (MALDI) A mass spectrometer uses the rules of physics to determine mass by deflecting these particles in electric or magnetic fields after the particles have been electrically charged. The whole process must take place in a vacuum. There are several types of mass spectrometers, such as Magnetic sector Quadrupole Quadrupole ion trap Fourier-transform ion-cyclotron resonance (FT-ICR) & Time-of-flight mass spectrometers. The mass spectrometer records the mass of molecules along with the masses and abundances of the fragments that occur when the molecules break up. Such a record is called a mass spectrum. It allows scientists to work out the structure of a molecule or identify it by comparison with a previously recorded mass spectrum. The ionized CO2 molecule (or molecular ion) appears at m/z 44. Since the ionization process breaks up or fragments some of the CO2 molecules, a fraction of the ions appear in the spectrum at m/z values less than the m/z value that corresponds to the molecular mass of CO2. Cleavage of a carbon-oxygen bond in the molecular ion to produce ionized carbon monoxide or ionized atomic oxygen result in the fragment ions at m/z 28 and 16; loss of two neutral oxygen atoms results in an additional fragment at m/z 12 for carbon. The molecular ion is designated as M+ or CO2+ and the fragment ions are designated as CO+, O+ and C+. Typical Mass Spectrum aspirin M+. What Information does Mass Spectrometry Provide? ☻ For large samples such as biomolecules, molecular weights can be measured to within an accuracy of 0.01% of the total molecular weight of the sample i.e. within a 4 Daltons (Da) or atomic mass units (amu) error for a sample of 40,000 Da. This is sufficient to allow minor mass changes to be detected, e.g. the substitution of one amino acid for another, or a posttranslational modification. ☻ For small organic molecules the molecular weight can be measured to within an accuracy of 5 ppm, which is often sufficient to confirm the molecular formula of a compound, and is also a standard requirement for publication in a chemical journal. ☻ Structural information can be generated using certain types of mass spectrometers, usually tandem mass spectrometers, and this is achieved by fragmenting the sample and analysing the products generated. This procedure is useful for the structural elucidation of organic compounds, for peptide or oligonucleotide sequencing, and for monitoring the existence of previously characterised compounds in complex mixtures with a high specificity by defining both the molecular weight and a diagnostic fragment of the molecule simultaneously e.g. for the detection of specific drug metabolites in biological matrices. Look for the molecular ion peak. This peak (if it appears) will be the highest mass peak in the spectrum, except for isotope peaks. Nominal MW (meaning=rounded off) will be an even number for compounds containing only C, H, O, S, Si. Nominal MW will be an odd number if the compound also contains an odd number of N (1,3,...). Try to calculate the molecular formula: The isotope peaks can be very useful, and are best explained with an example. Carbon 12 has an isotope, carbon 13. Their abundances are 12C=100%, 13C=1.1%. This means that for every 100 (12)C atoms there are 1.1 (13)C atoms. If a compound contains 6 carbons, then each atom has a 1.1% abundance of(13)C.Therefore, if the molecular ion peak is 100%, then the isotope peak (1 mass unit higher) would be 6x1.1%=6.6%. Look for A+2 elements: O, Si, S, Cl, Br Look for A+1 elements: C, N "A" elements: H, F, P, I Calculate the total number of rings plus double bonds: For the molecular formula: CxHyNzOn rings + double bonds = x - (1/2)y + (1/2)z + 1 Postulate the molecular structure consistent with abundance and m/z of fragments. The fragments corresponding to the peaks are shown below along with the structure of the parent compound, ethyl benzene: Much of the emphasis in mass spectrometry in the past century was placed on volatile atomic and small polyatomic species. However, over the course of the century, matter in all forms (solid, liquid, gas) was subjected to scrutiny by MS and the nature of the species of interest has come to include subatomic particles, elements, inorganic and organic polyatomic species, clusters, polymers (including biopolymers, non-covalently bound biocomplexes and microparticles. ESI allows for large, non-volatile molecules to be analyzed directly from the liquid phase Used for: Mass determination of biomolecules. Analysis and sequencing of proteins and oligonucleotides. Analyzing drugs, pesticides, and carbohydrates Long chain fatty acids. ELECTROSPRAY IONIZATION (ESI) In ESI MS the ionisation process is carried out at atmospheric pressure (API), and involves spraying a solution of the sample in a suitable solvent out of a small needle, to which a high voltage is applied. This process produces small charged droplets, and the solvent is then evaporated leaving the sample molecule in the gas phase and ionised. This is then 'swept' into a MS that is held essentially in vacuom and the ions separated and detected using a Mass Analyzer. Electrospray Ion Generation Droplets are generated when a high voltage is applied to a liquid stream. In electrospray larger droplets explode into smaller droplets and so on until the analyte enters the gas phase as an ion. In this example a single peptide is ionized to produce a population of charged and uncharged peptides. The number of positive charges that a molecule can support is generally related to the number of basic sites on the molecule. In positive ion mode the analyte is sprayed at low pH to encourage positive ion formation. In negative ion the analysis is normally carried out well above a molecules isoelectric point to deprotonate the molecule. The basic principle of all mass spectrometers is that a molecule must be charged (ionized) before the mass spectrometer can influence it in an electric field. Note: Most peptides obtained from a trypsin digest have two potential sites for protonation, the amino terminus and the basic C-terminal residue, lysine or arginine. A population of variably charged ions are generated in the electrospray process. In this example the population will contain peptides that have 1, 2 and 0 sites of protonation. The resulting spectrum contains singly and doubly charged species. The intensity of the peaks is a reflection of the population generated in the electrospray process. Some researchers have used peak abundance information in protein folding studies. The principles that they apply are; the more tightly folded a protein the more difficult it will be to protonate and it then follows that as a protein unfolds the peak distribution may change across a spectrum possibly favoring the more highly charged species Characteristics of ESI mass spectra • Small organic molecules (< 1000 Da) normally give singly charged ions. • Samples (M) with molecular weights greater than ca. 1200 Da give rise to multiply charged molecular-related ions such as (M+nH)n+ in positive ionisation mode and (M-nH)n- in negative ionisation mode. • Proteins have many suitable sites for protonation as all of the backbone amide nitrogen atoms could be protonated theoretically, as well as certain amino acid side chains such as lysine and arginine which contain primary amine functionalities. • As ESI is a very soft ionization technique even non-covalently bound molecules can be detected intact. The upper trace depicts the negative ESI-MS m/z spectrum of a 23mer RNA sample, with multiply charged ions from n =8 (m/z 950.5) to n = 15 (m/z 505.6). The lower trace shows the molecular mass profile produced from the m/z spectrum by Maximum Entropy data handling techniques. The mass accuracy was within 0.5 Da. Electrospray-Summary Sample introduction • Flow injection • LC/MS • Typical flow rates are less than 1 microliter per minute up to about a milliliter per minute Benefits • Good for charged, polar or basic compounds • Permits the detection of high-mass compounds at mass-to-charge ratios that are easily determined by most mass spectrometers (m/z typically less than 2000 to 3000). • Best method for analyzing multiply charged compounds • Very low chemical background leads to excellent detection limits • Can control presence or absence of fragmentation by controlling the interface lens potentials • Compatible with MS/MS methods Limitations • Multiply charged species require interpretation and mathematical transformation (can sometimes be difficult) • Complementary to APCI. Not good for uncharged, non-basic, low-polarity compounds (e.g.steroids) • Very sensitive to contaminants such as alkali metal salts or basic compounds Mass range Low-high Typically less than 200,000 Da. ESI features Multiply charged analytes Good for on-line coupling with liquid phase separations Ion suppression Requires good desolvation (presence of organic solvent) Intolerant to salts Hyphenated MS • GC-MS - Gas Chromatography MS – separates volatile compounds in gas column and ID’s by mass • LC-MS - Liquid Chromatography MS – separates delicate compounds in HPLC column and ID’s by mass • MS-MS - Tandem Mass Spectrometry – separates compound fragments by magnetic field and ID’s by mass Chromatograph-Mass Spectrometer A very important combination in mass spectrometry involves using a chromatograph (a device for separating complicated mixtures as they pass through a column- GC or LC) before the mass spectrometer. In this way very small traces of molecules can be detected in complicated samples containing thousands of different types of molecules. e.g. protein molecules from a sample of cells or a trace of an anabolic steroid in an olympic athlete’s body. < Mass spectrometers are commonly combined with separation devices such as gas chromatographs (GC) and liquid chromatographs (LC). The GC or LC separates the components in a mixture, and the components are introduced, one by one, into the mass spectrometer. MS/MS is an analogous technique where the first-stage separation device is another mass spectrometer. • MALDI is a method that allows vaporization & ionization of a non-volatile sample from solid phase directly into the gas phase. – biopolymers and oligomers proteins, peptides, oligonucleotides, oligosaccharides – synthetic polymers – inorganics, such a fullerenes – environmental compounds kerogens, coal tars, humic acids, fulvic acids A laser pulse is used for excitation – UV lasers cause electronic excitation – IR lasers cause vibrational excitation Matrix molecules transfer energy – low analyte fragmentation – matrices are selectable TOF-MS is used for analysis • A relatively new ionization technique • This desorption technique first introduced in 1988 by Hillenkamp and co-workers is very similar to FAB, but it utilizes photons instead of particles to desorb analyte molecular ions, [M+H]+, from a crystalline matrix. • The primary role of the matrix is to absorb the incident radiation which results in rapid heating of the crystal lattice on a time scale (femtoseconds) that is faster than thermal equilibration of the matrixanalyte lattice. • This process results in desorption or transfer to the gas phase of matrix and intact analyte ions. Principle of MALDI Pulsed laser: UV l 337 nm, 100 µJ energy in 3 ns pulse, 10 Hz repetition rate Ion extraction energy: Few keV to 25 kEV Time scales: Flight times > 100 µs, peak width: 10 ns High vacuum: 10-6 m bar Ion production in the MALDI source depends on the generation of a suitable composite material, consisting of the matrix and analyte. The prototypical MALDI recipe (i.e., dried-droplet method) is really very simple: a solution of the matrix compound is prepared and thoroughly mixed with analyte solution. A droplet of the mixture is then dried on the sample target, resulting in a solid deposit of analyte-doped matrix crystals. The dried sample spot is finally introduced into the mass spectrometer for laser desorption/ionization. The procedure is as simple as it sounds. • Simply mix 10 nanomoles of an aqueous matrix solution with 0.1 picomoles of analyte solution • Deposit the smallest possible aliquot on a clean metallic support • This droplet is either air dried or gently blown dried by means of hairblowers or radiative heating The properties of the matrix material used in the MALDI method are critical. Only a select group of compounds is useful for the selective desorption of proteins and polypeptides. A review of all the matrix materials available for peptides and proteins shows that there are certain characteristics the compounds must share to be analytically useful. Despite its importance, very little is known about what makes a matrix material "successful" for MALDI. The few materials that do work well are used heavily by all MALDI practitioners and new molecules are constantly being evaluated as potential matrix candidates. Matrix Materials Application Matrix a-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA) Peptides (<10 KDa), lipids, carbohydrates sinapinic acid (SA), or trans-3,5Peptides and large proteins (10dimethoxy-4-hydroxycinnamic acid 150KDa), glycoproteins, membrane proteins gentisic acid, or 2,5-dihydroxy benzoic acid (DHB) peptides, proteins, carbohydrates, glycoproteins, glycolipids, polymers, lipids, organic molecules trans-3-indoleacrylic acid (IAA) synthetic polymers 3-hydroxypicolinic acid (HPA) Oligonulceotides > 3.5KDa 2,4,6-trihydroxyacetophenone (THAP) Oligonucleotides < 3.5KDa dithranol (DIT) Polymers and fullerene compounds Deposit Matrix/Sample Spot on MALDI Target (Dried Droplet Method) Take 1 μ L of the mixture, place it on one of the spots on the sample card and allow the sample to completely dry. Do not disturb the MALDI target during the drying process. Once the sample is dry, you can immediately introduce the card into the MALDI spectrometer. Sample preparation is completed! IonSource Mass Spectrometry and Biotechnology Resource. Is focused on Protein LCMS and has many useful links, tutorials, tables, ... dmoz Open directory project Mass spectrometry MSLinks.com is a new web portal for mass spectrometry. It contains about 1,000 links (some broken), has an unusual design and is maintained by nice people Greetings to Robert Mass Spectrometry Links and more from Georgia Institute of Technology (Gatech). Mass Spectrometry Channel of Wiley's spectroscopy portal (former Base-Peak, Kermit Murray's). i-mass.com a web portal for mass spectrometry with lots of self praise ("we put the dot com in mass spectrometry", "i-mass.com is a comprehensive web site dedicated to (...) the concept of mass.") SIMS Secondary ion mass spectrometry. Tutorials, conferences, resources, ... sci.techniques.mass-spec Sorted topics in sci.techniques.mass-spec Societies for Mass Spectrometry NIST: Search for MS-spectra by: Name, Formula, Partial Formula, Molecular weight, CAS, ... Don't argue, look atAtomic Weights of the Elements and the Isotopic Compositions of the Elements direct from IUPAC Fragment Wizard