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Tandem mass spectrometry

Tandem mass spectrometry, also known as MS/MS or MS2, is a technique in instrumental analysis where two or more stages of analysis using one or more mass analyzer are performed with an additional reaction step in between these analyses to increase their abilities to analyse chemical samples.[1] A common use of tandem MS is the analysis of biomolecules, such as proteins and peptides.

A quadrupole time-of-flight hybrid tandem mass spectrometer.

The molecules of a given sample are ionized and the first spectrometer (designated MS1) separates these ions by their mass-to-charge ratio (often given as m/z or m/Q). Ions of a particular m/z-ratio coming from MS1 are selected and then made to split into smaller fragment ions, e.g. by collision-induced dissociation, ion-molecule reaction, or photodissociation. These fragments are then introduced into the second mass spectrometer (MS2), which in turn separates the fragments by their m/z-ratio and detects them. The fragmentation step makes it possible to identify and separate ions that have very similar m/z-ratios in regular mass spectrometers.

Structure edit

Typical tandem mass spectrometry instrumentation setups include triple quadrupole mass spectrometers (QqQ), multi-sector mass spectrometer, quadrupole–time of flight (Q-TOF), Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometers, and hybrid mass spectrometers.

Triple quadrupole mass spectrometer edit

Triple quadrupole mass spectrometers use the first and third quadrupoles as mass filters. When analytes pass the second quadrupole, the fragmentation proceeds through collision with gas.

Quadrupole–time of flight (Q-TOF) edit

Q-TOF mass spectrometer combines TOF and quadrupole instruments, which cause high mass accuracy for product ions, accurate quantitation capability, and fragmentation experiment applicability. This is a method of mass spectrometry that ion fragmentation (m/z) ratio determined through a time of flight measurement.

Hybrid mass spectrometer edit

Hybrid mass spectrometer consists of more than two mass analyzers.

Instrumentation edit

 
Schematic of tandem mass spectrometry

Multiple stages of mass analysis separation can be accomplished with individual mass spectrometer elements separated in space or using a single mass spectrometer with the MS steps separated in time. For tandem mass spectrometry in space, the different elements are often noted in a shorthand, giving the type of mass selector used.

Tandem in space edit

 
Triple quadrupole diagram; and example of tandem mass spectrometry in space

In tandem mass spectrometry in space, the separation elements are physically separated and distinct, although there is a physical connection between the elements to maintain high vacuum. These elements can be sectors, transmission quadrupole, or time-of-flight. When using multiple quadrupoles, they can act as both mass analyzers and collision chambers.

Common notation for mass analyzers is Q – quadrupole mass analyzer; qradio frequency collision quadrupole; TOFtime-of-flight mass analyzer; B – magnetic sector, and E – electric sector. The notation can be combined to indicate various hybrid instrument, for example QqQ'triple quadrupole mass spectrometer; QTOF – quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometer (also QqTOF); and BEBE – four-sector (reverse geometry) mass spectrometer.

Tandem in time edit

 
An ion trap mass spectrometer is an example of a tandem mass spectrometry in time instrument.

By doing tandem mass spectrometry in time, the separation is accomplished with ions trapped in the same place, with multiple separation steps taking place over time. A quadrupole ion trap or Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) instrument can be used for such an analysis.[2] Trapping instruments can perform multiple steps of analysis, which is sometimes referred to as MSn (MS to the n).[3] Often the number of steps, n, is not indicated, but occasionally the value is specified; for example MS3 indicates three stages of separation. Tandem in time MS instruments do not use the modes described next, but typically collect all of the information from a precursor ion scan and a parent ion scan of the entire spectrum. Each instrumental configuration utilizes a unique mode of mass identification.

Tandem in space MS/MS modes edit

When tandem MS is performed with an in space design, the instrument must operate in one of a variety of modes. There are a number of different tandem MS/MS experimental setups and each mode has its own applications and provides different information. Tandem MS in space uses the coupling of two instrument components which measure the same mass spectrum range but with a controlled fractionation between them in space, while tandem MS in time involves the use of an ion trap.

There are four main scan experiments possible using MS/MS: precursor ion scan, product ion scan, neutral loss scan, and selected reaction monitoring.

For a precursor ion scan, the product ion is selected in the second mass analyzer, and the precursor masses are scanned in the first mass analyzer. Note that precursor ion[4] is synonymous with parent ion[5] and product ion[6] with daughter ion;[7] however the use of these anthropomorphic terms is discouraged.[8][9]

In a product ion scan, a precursor ion is selected in the first stage, allowed to fragment and then all resultant masses are scanned in the second mass analyzer and detected in the detector that is positioned after the second mass analyzer. This experiment is commonly performed to identify transitions used for quantification by tandem MS.

In a neutral loss scan, the first mass analyzer scans all the masses. The second mass analyzer also scans, but at a set offset from the first mass analyzer.[10] This offset corresponds to a neutral loss that is commonly observed for the class of compounds. In a constant-neutral-loss scan, all precursors that undergo the loss of a specified common neutral are monitored. To obtain this information, both mass analyzers are scanned simultaneously, but with a mass offset that correlates with the mass of the specified neutral. Similar to the precursor-ion scan, this technique is also useful in the selective identification of closely related class of compounds in a mixture.

In selected reaction monitoring, both mass analyzers are set to a selected mass. This mode is analogous to selected ion monitoring for MS experiments. A selective analysis mode, which can increase sensitivity.[11]

Fragmentation edit

Fragmentation of gas-phase ions is essential to tandem mass spectrometry and occurs between different stages of mass analysis. There are many methods used to fragment the ions and these can result in different types of fragmentation and thus different information about the structure and composition of the molecule.

In-source fragmentation edit

Often, the ionization process is sufficiently violent to leave the resulting ions with sufficient internal energy to fragment within the mass spectrometer. If the product ions persist in their non-equilibrium state for a moderate amount of time before auto-dissociation this process is called metastable fragmentation.[12] Nozzle-skimmer fragmentation refers to the purposeful induction of in-source fragmentation by increasing the nozzle-skimmer potential on usually electrospray based instruments. Although in-source fragmentation allows for fragmentation analysis, it is not technically tandem mass spectrometry unless metastable ions are mass analyzed or selected before auto-dissociation and a second stage of analysis is performed on the resulting fragments. In-source fragmentation can be used in lieu of tandem mass spectrometry through the utilization of Enhanced in-Source Fragmentation Annotation (EISA) technology which generates fragmentation that directly matches tandem mass spectrometry data.[13] Fragments observed by EISA have higher signal intensity than traditional fragments which suffer losses in the collision cells of tandem mass spectrometers.[14] EISA enables fragmentation data acquisition on MS1 mass analyzers such as time-of-flight and single quadrupole instruments. In-source fragmentation is often used in addition to tandem mass spectrometry (with post-source fragmentation) to allow for two steps of fragmentation in a pseudo MS3-type of experiment.[15]

Collision-induced dissociation edit

Post-source fragmentation is most often what is being used in a tandem mass spectrometry experiment. Energy can also be added to the ions, which are usually already vibrationally excited, through post-source collisions with neutral atoms or molecules, the absorption of radiation, or the transfer or capture of an electron by a multiply charged ion. Collision-induced dissociation (CID), also called collisionally activated dissociation (CAD), involves the collision of an ion with a neutral atom or molecule in the gas phase and subsequent dissociation of the ion.[16][17] For example, consider

 

where the ion AB+ collides with the neutral species M and subsequently breaks apart. The details of this process are described by collision theory. Due to different instrumental configuration, two main different types of CID are possible: (i) beam-type (in which precursor ions are fragmented on-the-flight)[18] and (ii) ion trap-type (in which precursor ions are first trapped, and then fragmented).[19][20]

A third and more recent type of CID fragmentation is higher-energy collisional dissociation (HCD). HCD is a CID technique specific to orbitrap mass spectrometers in which fragmentation takes place external to the ion trap,[21][22] it happens in the HCD cell (in some instruments named "ion routing multipole").[23] HCD is a trap-type fragmentation that has been shown to have beam-type characteristics.[24][25] Freely available large scale high resolution tandem mass spectrometry databases exist (e.g. METLIN with 850,000 molecular standards each with experimental CID MS/MS data),[26] and are typically used to facilitate small molecule identification.

Electron capture and transfer methods edit

The energy released when an electron is transferred to or captured by a multiply charged ion can induce fragmentation.

Electron-capture dissociation edit

If an electron is added to a multiply charged positive ion, the Coulomb energy is liberated. Adding a free electron is called electron-capture dissociation (ECD),[27] and is represented by

 

for a multiply protonated molecule M.

Electron-transfer dissociation edit

Adding an electron through an ion-ion reaction is called electron-transfer dissociation (ETD).[28][29] Similar to electron-capture dissociation, ETD induces fragmentation of cations (e.g. peptides or proteins) by transferring electrons to them. It was invented by Donald F. Hunt, Joshua Coon, John E. P. Syka and Jarrod Marto at the University of Virginia.[30]

ETD does not use free electrons but employs radical anions (e.g. anthracene or azobenzene) for this purpose:

 

where A is the anion.[31]

ETD cleaves randomly along the peptide backbone (c and z ions) while side chains and modifications such as phosphorylation are left intact. The technique only works well for higher charge state ions (z>2), however relative to collision-induced dissociation (CID), ETD is advantageous for the fragmentation of longer peptides or even entire proteins. This makes the technique important for top-down proteomics. Much like ECD, ETD is effective for peptides with modifications such as phosphorylation.[32]

Electron-transfer and higher-energy collision dissociation (EThcD) is a combination ETD and HCD where the peptide precursor is initially subjected to an ion/ion reaction with fluoranthene anions in a linear ion trap, which generates c- and z-ions.[28][33] In the second step HCD all-ion fragmentation is applied to all ETD derived ions to generate b- and y- ions prior to final analysis in the orbitrap analyzer.[21] This method employs dual fragmentation to generate ion- and thus data-rich MS/MS spectra for peptide sequencing and PTM localization.[34]

Negative electron-transfer dissociation edit

Fragmentation can also occur with a deprotonated species, in which an electron is transferred from the species to an cationic reagent in a negative electron transfer dissociation (NETD):[35]

 

Following this transfer event, the electron-deficient anion undergoes internal rearrangement and fragments. NETD is the ion/ion analogue of electron-detachment dissociation (EDD).

NETD is compatible with fragmenting peptide and proteins along the backbone at the Cα-C bond. The resulting fragments are usually a- and x-type product ions.

Electron-detachment dissociation edit

Electron-detachment dissociation (EDD) is a method for fragmenting anionic species in mass spectrometry.[36] It serves as a negative counter mode to electron capture dissociation. Negatively charged ions are activated by irradiation with electrons of moderate kinetic energy. The result is ejection of electrons from the parent ionic molecule, which causes dissociation via recombination.

Charge-transfer dissociation edit

Reaction between positively charged peptides and cationic reagents,[37] also known as charge transfer dissociation (CTD),[38] has recently been demonstrated as an alternative high-energy fragmentation pathway for low-charge state (1+ or 2+) peptides. The proposed mechanism of CTD using helium cations as the reagent is:

 

Initial reports are that CTD causes backbone Cα-C bond cleavage of peptides and provides a- and x-type product ions.

Photodissociation edit

The energy required for dissociation can be added by photon absorption, resulting in ion photodissociation and represented by

 

where   represents the photon absorbed by the ion. Ultraviolet lasers can be used, but can lead to excessive fragmentation of biomolecules.[39]

Infrared multiphoton dissociation edit

Infrared photons will heat the ions and cause dissociation if enough of them are absorbed. This process is called infrared multiphoton dissociation (IRMPD) and is often accomplished with a carbon dioxide laser and an ion trapping mass spectrometer such as a FTMS.[40]

Blackbody infrared radiative dissociation edit

Blackbody radiation can be used for photodissociation in a technique known as blackbody infrared radiative dissociation (BIRD).[41] In the BIRD method, the entire mass spectrometer vacuum chamber is heated to create infrared light. BIRD uses this radiation to excite increasingly more energetic vibrations of the ions, until a bond breaks, creating fragments.[41][42] This is similar to infrared multiphoton dissociation which also uses infrared light, but from a different source.[17] BIRD is most often used with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry.

Surface-induced dissociation edit

With surface-induced dissociation (SID), the fragmentation is a result of the collision of an ion with a surface under high vacuum.[43][44] Today, SID is used to fragment a wide range of ions. Years ago, it was only common to use SID on lower mass, singly charged species because ionization methods and mass analyzer technologies weren't advanced enough to properly form, transmit, or characterize ions of high m/z. Over time, self-assembled monolayer surfaces (SAMs) composed of CF3(CF2)10CH2CH2S on gold have been the most prominently used collision surfaces for SID in a tandem spectrometer. SAMs have acted as the most desirable collision targets due to their characteristically large effective masses for the collision of incoming ions. Additionally, these surfaces are composed of rigid fluorocarbon chains, which don't significantly dampen the energy of the projectile ions. The fluorocarbon chains are also beneficial because of their ability to resist facile electron transfer from the metal surface to the incoming ions.[45] SID's ability to produce subcomplexes that remain stable and provide valuable information on connectivity is unmatched by any other dissociation technique. Since the complexes produced from SID are stable and retain distribution of charge on the fragment, this produces a unique, spectra which the complex centers around a narrower m/z distribution. The SID products and the energy at which they form are reflective of the strengths and topology of the complex. The unique dissociation patterns help discover the Quaternary structure of the complex. The symmetric charge distribution and dissociation dependence are unique to SID and make the spectra produced distinctive from any other dissociation technique.[45]

The SID technique is also applicable to ion-mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS). Three different methods for this technique include analyzing the characterization of topology, intersubunit connectivity, and the degree of unfolding for protein structure. Analysis of protein structure unfolding is the most commonly used application of the SID technique. For Ion-mobility mass spectrometry (IM-MS), SID is used for dissociation of the source activated precursors of three different types of protein complexes: C-reactive protein (CRP), transthyretin (TTR), and concanavalin A (Con A). This method is used to observe the unfolding degree for each of these complexes. For this observation, SID showed the precursor ions' structures that exist before the collision with the surface. IM-MS utilizes the SID as a direct measure of the conformation for each proteins' subunit.[46]

Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance (FTICR) are able to provide ultrahigh resolution and high mass accuracy to instruments that take mass measurements. These features make FTICR mass spectrometers a useful tool for a wide variety of applications such as several dissociation experiments[47] such as collision-induced dissociation (CID, electron transfer dissociation (ETD),[48] and others. In addition, surface-induced dissociation has been implemented with this instrument for the study of fundamental peptide fragmentation. Specifically, SID has been applied to the study of energetics and the kinetics of gas-phase fragmentation within an ICR instrument.[49] This approach has been used to understand the gas-phase fragmentation of protonated peptides, odd-electron peptide ions, non-covalent ligand-peptide complexes, and ligated metal clusters.

Quantitative proteomics edit

Quantitative proteomics is used to determine the relative or absolute amount of proteins in a sample.[50][51][52] Several quantitative proteomics methods are based on tandem mass spectrometry. MS/MS has become a benchmark procedure for the structural elucidation of complex biomolecules.[53]

One method commonly used for quantitative proteomics is isobaric tag labeling. Isobaric tag labeling enables simultaneous identification and quantification of proteins from multiple samples in a single analysis. To quantify proteins, peptides are labeled with chemical tags that have the same structure and nominal mass, but vary in the distribution of heavy isotopes in their structure. These tags, commonly referred to as tandem mass tags, are designed so that the mass tag is cleaved at a specific linker region upon higher-energy collisional-induced dissociation (HCD) during tandem mass spectrometry yielding reporter ions of different masses. Protein quantitation is accomplished by comparing the intensities of the reporter ions in the MS/MS spectra. Two commercially available isobaric tags are iTRAQ and TMT reagents.

Isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) edit

 
Isobaric labeling for tandem mass spectrometry: proteins are extracted from cells, digested, and labeled with tags of the same mass. When fragmented during MS/MS, the reporter ions show the relative amount of the peptides in the samples.

An isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ) is a reagent for tandem mass spectrometry that is used to determine the amount of proteins from different sources in a single experiment.[54][55][56] It uses stable isotope labeled molecules that can form a covalent bond with the N-terminus and side chain amines of proteins. The iTRAQ reagents are used to label peptides from different samples that are pooled and analyzed by liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry. The fragmentation of the attached tag generates a low molecular mass reporter ion that can be used to relatively quantify the peptides and the proteins from which they originated.

Tandem mass tag (TMT) edit

A tandem mass tag (TMT) is an isobaric mass tag chemical label used for protein quantification and identification.[57] The tags contain four regions: mass reporter, cleavable linker, mass normalization, and protein reactive group. TMT reagents can be used to simultaneously analyze 2 to 11 different peptide samples prepared from cells, tissues or biological fluids. Recent develepments allow up to 16 and even 18 samples (16plex or 18plex respectively) to be analyzed.[58][59] Three types of TMT reagents are available with different chemical reactivities: (1) a reactive NHS ester functional group for labeling primary amines (TMTduplex, TMTsixplex, TMT10plex plus TMT11-131C), (2) a reactive iodoacetyl functional group for labeling free sulfhydryls (iodoTMT) and (3) reactive alkoxyamine functional group for labeling of carbonyls (aminoxyTMT).

Applications edit

Peptides edit

 
Chromatography trace (top) and tandem mass spectrum (bottom) of a peptide.

Tandem mass spectrometry can be used for protein sequencing.[60] When intact proteins are introduced to a mass analyzer, this is called "top-down proteomics" and when proteins are digested into smaller peptides and subsequently introduced into the mass spectrometer, this is called "bottom-up proteomics". Shotgun proteomics is a variant of bottom up proteomics in which proteins in a mixture are digested prior to separation and tandem mass spectrometry.

Tandem mass spectrometry can produce a peptide sequence tag that can be used to identify a peptide in a protein database.[61][62][63] A notation has been developed for indicating peptide fragments that arise from a tandem mass spectrum.[64] Peptide fragment ions are indicated by a, b, or c if the charge is retained on the N-terminus and by x, y or z if the charge is maintained on the C-terminus. The subscript indicates the number of amino acid residues in the fragment. Superscripts are sometimes used to indicate neutral losses in addition to the backbone fragmentation, * for loss of ammonia and ° for loss of water. Although peptide backbone cleavage is the most useful for sequencing and peptide identification other fragment ions may be observed under high energy dissociation conditions. These include the side chain loss ions d, v, w and ammonium ions[65][66] and additional sequence-specific fragment ions associated with particular amino acid residues.[67]

Oligosaccharides edit

Oligosaccharides may be sequenced using tandem mass spectrometry in a similar manner to peptide sequencing.[68] Fragmentation generally occurs on either side of the glycosidic bond (b, c, y and z ions) but also under more energetic conditions through the sugar ring structure in a cross-ring cleavage (x ions). Again trailing subscripts are used to indicate position of the cleavage along the chain. For cross ring cleavage ions the nature of the cross ring cleavage is indicated by preceding superscripts.[69][70]

Oligonucleotides edit

Tandem mass spectrometry has been applied to DNA and RNA sequencing.[71][72] A notation for gas-phase fragmentation of oligonucleotide ions has been proposed.[73]

Newborn screening edit

Newborn screening is the process of testing newborn babies for treatable genetic, endocrinologic, metabolic and hematologic diseases.[74][75] The development of tandem mass spectrometry screening in the early 1990s led to a large expansion of potentially detectable congenital metabolic diseases that affect blood levels of organic acids.[76]

Limitation edit

Tandem mass spectrometry cannot be applied for single-cell analyses as it is insensitive to analyze such small amounts of a cell. These limitations are primarily due to a combination of inefficient ion production and ion losses within the instruments due to chemical noise sources of solvents.[77]

Future outlook edit

Tandem mass spectrometry will be a useful tool for protein characterization, nucleoprotein complexes, and other biological structures. However, some challenges left such as analyzing the characterization of the proteome quantitatively and qualitatively.[78]

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • McLuckey SA, Busch KL, Glish GL (1988). Mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry: techniques and applications of tandem mass spectrometry. New York, N.Y: VCH Publishers. ISBN 978-0-89573-275-0.
  • McLuckey SA, Glish GL (18 January 1989). Mass Spectrometry/Mass Spectrometry: Techniques and Applications of Tandem. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-18699-1.
  • McLafferty FW (1983). Tandem mass spectrometry. New York: Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-86597-1.
  • Sherman NE, Kinter M (2000). Protein sequencing and identification using tandem mass spectrometry. New York: John Wiley. ISBN 978-0-471-32249-8.

External links edit

  • An Introduction to Mass Spectrometry by Dr Alison E. Ashcroft 8 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine

tandem, mass, spectrometry, also, known, technique, instrumental, analysis, where, more, stages, analysis, using, more, mass, analyzer, performed, with, additional, reaction, step, between, these, analyses, increase, their, abilities, analyse, chemical, sample. Tandem mass spectrometry also known as MS MS or MS2 is a technique in instrumental analysis where two or more stages of analysis using one or more mass analyzer are performed with an additional reaction step in between these analyses to increase their abilities to analyse chemical samples 1 A common use of tandem MS is the analysis of biomolecules such as proteins and peptides A quadrupole time of flight hybrid tandem mass spectrometer The molecules of a given sample are ionized and the first spectrometer designated MS1 separates these ions by their mass to charge ratio often given as m z or m Q Ions of a particular m z ratio coming from MS1 are selected and then made to split into smaller fragment ions e g by collision induced dissociation ion molecule reaction or photodissociation These fragments are then introduced into the second mass spectrometer MS2 which in turn separates the fragments by their m z ratio and detects them The fragmentation step makes it possible to identify and separate ions that have very similar m z ratios in regular mass spectrometers Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Triple quadrupole mass spectrometer 1 2 Quadrupole time of flight Q TOF 1 3 Hybrid mass spectrometer 2 Instrumentation 2 1 Tandem in space 2 2 Tandem in time 2 3 Tandem in space MS MS modes 3 Fragmentation 3 1 In source fragmentation 3 2 Collision induced dissociation 3 3 Electron capture and transfer methods 3 3 1 Electron capture dissociation 3 3 2 Electron transfer dissociation 3 3 3 Negative electron transfer dissociation 3 3 4 Electron detachment dissociation 3 3 5 Charge transfer dissociation 3 4 Photodissociation 3 4 1 Infrared multiphoton dissociation 3 4 2 Blackbody infrared radiative dissociation 3 5 Surface induced dissociation 4 Quantitative proteomics 4 1 Isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation iTRAQ 4 2 Tandem mass tag TMT 5 Applications 5 1 Peptides 5 2 Oligosaccharides 5 3 Oligonucleotides 5 4 Newborn screening 6 Limitation 7 Future outlook 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksStructure editTypical tandem mass spectrometry instrumentation setups include triple quadrupole mass spectrometers QqQ multi sector mass spectrometer quadrupole time of flight Q TOF Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometers and hybrid mass spectrometers Triple quadrupole mass spectrometer edit Triple quadrupole mass spectrometers use the first and third quadrupoles as mass filters When analytes pass the second quadrupole the fragmentation proceeds through collision with gas Quadrupole time of flight Q TOF edit Q TOF mass spectrometer combines TOF and quadrupole instruments which cause high mass accuracy for product ions accurate quantitation capability and fragmentation experiment applicability This is a method of mass spectrometry that ion fragmentation m z ratio determined through a time of flight measurement Hybrid mass spectrometer edit Hybrid mass spectrometer consists of more than two mass analyzers Instrumentation edit nbsp Schematic of tandem mass spectrometryMultiple stages of mass analysis separation can be accomplished with individual mass spectrometer elements separated in space or using a single mass spectrometer with the MS steps separated in time For tandem mass spectrometry in space the different elements are often noted in a shorthand giving the type of mass selector used Tandem in space edit nbsp Triple quadrupole diagram and example of tandem mass spectrometry in spaceIn tandem mass spectrometry in space the separation elements are physically separated and distinct although there is a physical connection between the elements to maintain high vacuum These elements can be sectors transmission quadrupole or time of flight When using multiple quadrupoles they can act as both mass analyzers and collision chambers Common notation for mass analyzers is Q quadrupole mass analyzer q radio frequency collision quadrupole TOF time of flight mass analyzer B magnetic sector and E electric sector The notation can be combined to indicate various hybrid instrument for example QqQ triple quadrupole mass spectrometer QTOF quadrupole time of flight mass spectrometer also QqTOF and BEBE four sector reverse geometry mass spectrometer Tandem in time edit nbsp An ion trap mass spectrometer is an example of a tandem mass spectrometry in time instrument By doing tandem mass spectrometry in time the separation is accomplished with ions trapped in the same place with multiple separation steps taking place over time A quadrupole ion trap or Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance FTICR instrument can be used for such an analysis 2 Trapping instruments can perform multiple steps of analysis which is sometimes referred to as MSn MS to the n 3 Often the number of steps n is not indicated but occasionally the value is specified for example MS3 indicates three stages of separation Tandem in time MS instruments do not use the modes described next but typically collect all of the information from a precursor ion scan and a parent ion scan of the entire spectrum Each instrumental configuration utilizes a unique mode of mass identification Tandem in space MS MS modes edit When tandem MS is performed with an in space design the instrument must operate in one of a variety of modes There are a number of different tandem MS MS experimental setups and each mode has its own applications and provides different information Tandem MS in space uses the coupling of two instrument components which measure the same mass spectrum range but with a controlled fractionation between them in space while tandem MS in time involves the use of an ion trap There are four main scan experiments possible using MS MS precursor ion scan product ion scan neutral loss scan and selected reaction monitoring For a precursor ion scan the product ion is selected in the second mass analyzer and the precursor masses are scanned in the first mass analyzer Note that precursor ion 4 is synonymous with parent ion 5 and product ion 6 with daughter ion 7 however the use of these anthropomorphic terms is discouraged 8 9 In a product ion scan a precursor ion is selected in the first stage allowed to fragment and then all resultant masses are scanned in the second mass analyzer and detected in the detector that is positioned after the second mass analyzer This experiment is commonly performed to identify transitions used for quantification by tandem MS In a neutral loss scan the first mass analyzer scans all the masses The second mass analyzer also scans but at a set offset from the first mass analyzer 10 This offset corresponds to a neutral loss that is commonly observed for the class of compounds In a constant neutral loss scan all precursors that undergo the loss of a specified common neutral are monitored To obtain this information both mass analyzers are scanned simultaneously but with a mass offset that correlates with the mass of the specified neutral Similar to the precursor ion scan this technique is also useful in the selective identification of closely related class of compounds in a mixture In selected reaction monitoring both mass analyzers are set to a selected mass This mode is analogous to selected ion monitoring for MS experiments A selective analysis mode which can increase sensitivity 11 Fragmentation editMain article Fragmentation chemistry Fragmentation of gas phase ions is essential to tandem mass spectrometry and occurs between different stages of mass analysis There are many methods used to fragment the ions and these can result in different types of fragmentation and thus different information about the structure and composition of the molecule In source fragmentation edit Often the ionization process is sufficiently violent to leave the resulting ions with sufficient internal energy to fragment within the mass spectrometer If the product ions persist in their non equilibrium state for a moderate amount of time before auto dissociation this process is called metastable fragmentation 12 Nozzle skimmer fragmentation refers to the purposeful induction of in source fragmentation by increasing the nozzle skimmer potential on usually electrospray based instruments Although in source fragmentation allows for fragmentation analysis it is not technically tandem mass spectrometry unless metastable ions are mass analyzed or selected before auto dissociation and a second stage of analysis is performed on the resulting fragments In source fragmentation can be used in lieu of tandem mass spectrometry through the utilization of Enhanced in Source Fragmentation Annotation EISA technology which generates fragmentation that directly matches tandem mass spectrometry data 13 Fragments observed by EISA have higher signal intensity than traditional fragments which suffer losses in the collision cells of tandem mass spectrometers 14 EISA enables fragmentation data acquisition on MS1 mass analyzers such as time of flight and single quadrupole instruments In source fragmentation is often used in addition to tandem mass spectrometry with post source fragmentation to allow for two steps of fragmentation in a pseudo MS3 type of experiment 15 Collision induced dissociation edit Post source fragmentation is most often what is being used in a tandem mass spectrometry experiment Energy can also be added to the ions which are usually already vibrationally excited through post source collisions with neutral atoms or molecules the absorption of radiation or the transfer or capture of an electron by a multiply charged ion Collision induced dissociation CID also called collisionally activated dissociation CAD involves the collision of an ion with a neutral atom or molecule in the gas phase and subsequent dissociation of the ion 16 17 For example consider AB M A B M displaystyle ce AB M gt A B M nbsp where the ion AB collides with the neutral species M and subsequently breaks apart The details of this process are described by collision theory Due to different instrumental configuration two main different types of CID are possible i beam type in which precursor ions are fragmented on the flight 18 and ii ion trap type in which precursor ions are first trapped and then fragmented 19 20 A third and more recent type of CID fragmentation is higher energy collisional dissociation HCD HCD is a CID technique specific to orbitrap mass spectrometers in which fragmentation takes place external to the ion trap 21 22 it happens in the HCD cell in some instruments named ion routing multipole 23 HCD is a trap type fragmentation that has been shown to have beam type characteristics 24 25 Freely available large scale high resolution tandem mass spectrometry databases exist e g METLIN with 850 000 molecular standards each with experimental CID MS MS data 26 and are typically used to facilitate small molecule identification Electron capture and transfer methods edit The energy released when an electron is transferred to or captured by a multiply charged ion can induce fragmentation Electron capture dissociation edit If an electron is added to a multiply charged positive ion the Coulomb energy is liberated Adding a free electron is called electron capture dissociation ECD 27 and is represented by M n H n e M n 1 H n 1 fragments displaystyle ce M n ce H n ce e gt left ce M n 1 ce H n 1 right ce gt fragments nbsp for a multiply protonated molecule M Electron transfer dissociation edit Adding an electron through an ion ion reaction is called electron transfer dissociation ETD 28 29 Similar to electron capture dissociation ETD induces fragmentation of cations e g peptides or proteins by transferring electrons to them It was invented by Donald F Hunt Joshua Coon John E P Syka and Jarrod Marto at the University of Virginia 30 ETD does not use free electrons but employs radical anions e g anthracene or azobenzene for this purpose M n H n A M n 1 H n 1 A fragments displaystyle ce M n ce H n ce A gt left ce M n 1 ce H n 1 right ce A gt fragments nbsp where A is the anion 31 ETD cleaves randomly along the peptide backbone c and z ions while side chains and modifications such as phosphorylation are left intact The technique only works well for higher charge state ions z gt 2 however relative to collision induced dissociation CID ETD is advantageous for the fragmentation of longer peptides or even entire proteins This makes the technique important for top down proteomics Much like ECD ETD is effective for peptides with modifications such as phosphorylation 32 Electron transfer and higher energy collision dissociation EThcD is a combination ETD and HCD where the peptide precursor is initially subjected to an ion ion reaction with fluoranthene anions in a linear ion trap which generates c and z ions 28 33 In the second step HCD all ion fragmentation is applied to all ETD derived ions to generate b and y ions prior to final analysis in the orbitrap analyzer 21 This method employs dual fragmentation to generate ion and thus data rich MS MS spectra for peptide sequencing and PTM localization 34 Negative electron transfer dissociation edit Fragmentation can also occur with a deprotonated species in which an electron is transferred from the species to an cationic reagent in a negative electron transfer dissociation NETD 35 M n H n A M n H n 1 A fragments displaystyle ce M n ce H n ce A gt left ce M n ce H n 1 right ce A gt fragments nbsp Following this transfer event the electron deficient anion undergoes internal rearrangement and fragments NETD is the ion ion analogue of electron detachment dissociation EDD NETD is compatible with fragmenting peptide and proteins along the backbone at the Ca C bond The resulting fragments are usually a and x type product ions Electron detachment dissociation edit Electron detachment dissociation EDD is a method for fragmenting anionic species in mass spectrometry 36 It serves as a negative counter mode to electron capture dissociation Negatively charged ions are activated by irradiation with electrons of moderate kinetic energy The result is ejection of electrons from the parent ionic molecule which causes dissociation via recombination Charge transfer dissociation edit Reaction between positively charged peptides and cationic reagents 37 also known as charge transfer dissociation CTD 38 has recently been demonstrated as an alternative high energy fragmentation pathway for low charge state 1 or 2 peptides The proposed mechanism of CTD using helium cations as the reagent is M H 1 He M H 2 He 0 fragments displaystyle ce M H 1 He gt left ce M H 2 right ce He 0 gt fragments nbsp Initial reports are that CTD causes backbone Ca C bond cleavage of peptides and provides a and x type product ions Photodissociation edit The energy required for dissociation can be added by photon absorption resulting in ion photodissociation and represented by AB h n A B displaystyle ce AB mathit h nu gt A B nbsp where h n displaystyle h nu nbsp represents the photon absorbed by the ion Ultraviolet lasers can be used but can lead to excessive fragmentation of biomolecules 39 Infrared multiphoton dissociation edit Infrared photons will heat the ions and cause dissociation if enough of them are absorbed This process is called infrared multiphoton dissociation IRMPD and is often accomplished with a carbon dioxide laser and an ion trapping mass spectrometer such as a FTMS 40 Blackbody infrared radiative dissociation edit Blackbody radiation can be used for photodissociation in a technique known as blackbody infrared radiative dissociation BIRD 41 In the BIRD method the entire mass spectrometer vacuum chamber is heated to create infrared light BIRD uses this radiation to excite increasingly more energetic vibrations of the ions until a bond breaks creating fragments 41 42 This is similar to infrared multiphoton dissociation which also uses infrared light but from a different source 17 BIRD is most often used with Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry Surface induced dissociation edit With surface induced dissociation SID the fragmentation is a result of the collision of an ion with a surface under high vacuum 43 44 Today SID is used to fragment a wide range of ions Years ago it was only common to use SID on lower mass singly charged species because ionization methods and mass analyzer technologies weren t advanced enough to properly form transmit or characterize ions of high m z Over time self assembled monolayer surfaces SAMs composed of CF3 CF2 10CH2CH2S on gold have been the most prominently used collision surfaces for SID in a tandem spectrometer SAMs have acted as the most desirable collision targets due to their characteristically large effective masses for the collision of incoming ions Additionally these surfaces are composed of rigid fluorocarbon chains which don t significantly dampen the energy of the projectile ions The fluorocarbon chains are also beneficial because of their ability to resist facile electron transfer from the metal surface to the incoming ions 45 SID s ability to produce subcomplexes that remain stable and provide valuable information on connectivity is unmatched by any other dissociation technique Since the complexes produced from SID are stable and retain distribution of charge on the fragment this produces a unique spectra which the complex centers around a narrower m z distribution The SID products and the energy at which they form are reflective of the strengths and topology of the complex The unique dissociation patterns help discover the Quaternary structure of the complex The symmetric charge distribution and dissociation dependence are unique to SID and make the spectra produced distinctive from any other dissociation technique 45 The SID technique is also applicable to ion mobility mass spectrometry IM MS Three different methods for this technique include analyzing the characterization of topology intersubunit connectivity and the degree of unfolding for protein structure Analysis of protein structure unfolding is the most commonly used application of the SID technique For Ion mobility mass spectrometry IM MS SID is used for dissociation of the source activated precursors of three different types of protein complexes C reactive protein CRP transthyretin TTR and concanavalin A Con A This method is used to observe the unfolding degree for each of these complexes For this observation SID showed the precursor ions structures that exist before the collision with the surface IM MS utilizes the SID as a direct measure of the conformation for each proteins subunit 46 Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance FTICR are able to provide ultrahigh resolution and high mass accuracy to instruments that take mass measurements These features make FTICR mass spectrometers a useful tool for a wide variety of applications such as several dissociation experiments 47 such as collision induced dissociation CID electron transfer dissociation ETD 48 and others In addition surface induced dissociation has been implemented with this instrument for the study of fundamental peptide fragmentation Specifically SID has been applied to the study of energetics and the kinetics of gas phase fragmentation within an ICR instrument 49 This approach has been used to understand the gas phase fragmentation of protonated peptides odd electron peptide ions non covalent ligand peptide complexes and ligated metal clusters Quantitative proteomics editQuantitative proteomics is used to determine the relative or absolute amount of proteins in a sample 50 51 52 Several quantitative proteomics methods are based on tandem mass spectrometry MS MS has become a benchmark procedure for the structural elucidation of complex biomolecules 53 One method commonly used for quantitative proteomics is isobaric tag labeling Isobaric tag labeling enables simultaneous identification and quantification of proteins from multiple samples in a single analysis To quantify proteins peptides are labeled with chemical tags that have the same structure and nominal mass but vary in the distribution of heavy isotopes in their structure These tags commonly referred to as tandem mass tags are designed so that the mass tag is cleaved at a specific linker region upon higher energy collisional induced dissociation HCD during tandem mass spectrometry yielding reporter ions of different masses Protein quantitation is accomplished by comparing the intensities of the reporter ions in the MS MS spectra Two commercially available isobaric tags are iTRAQ and TMT reagents Isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantitation iTRAQ edit nbsp Isobaric labeling for tandem mass spectrometry proteins are extracted from cells digested and labeled with tags of the same mass When fragmented during MS MS the reporter ions show the relative amount of the peptides in the samples An isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation iTRAQ is a reagent for tandem mass spectrometry that is used to determine the amount of proteins from different sources in a single experiment 54 55 56 It uses stable isotope labeled molecules that can form a covalent bond with the N terminus and side chain amines of proteins The iTRAQ reagents are used to label peptides from different samples that are pooled and analyzed by liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry The fragmentation of the attached tag generates a low molecular mass reporter ion that can be used to relatively quantify the peptides and the proteins from which they originated Tandem mass tag TMT edit A tandem mass tag TMT is an isobaric mass tag chemical label used for protein quantification and identification 57 The tags contain four regions mass reporter cleavable linker mass normalization and protein reactive group TMT reagents can be used to simultaneously analyze 2 to 11 different peptide samples prepared from cells tissues or biological fluids Recent develepments allow up to 16 and even 18 samples 16plex or 18plex respectively to be analyzed 58 59 Three types of TMT reagents are available with different chemical reactivities 1 a reactive NHS ester functional group for labeling primary amines TMTduplex TMTsixplex TMT10plex plus TMT11 131C 2 a reactive iodoacetyl functional group for labeling free sulfhydryls iodoTMT and 3 reactive alkoxyamine functional group for labeling of carbonyls aminoxyTMT Applications editPeptides edit nbsp Chromatography trace top and tandem mass spectrum bottom of a peptide Tandem mass spectrometry can be used for protein sequencing 60 When intact proteins are introduced to a mass analyzer this is called top down proteomics and when proteins are digested into smaller peptides and subsequently introduced into the mass spectrometer this is called bottom up proteomics Shotgun proteomics is a variant of bottom up proteomics in which proteins in a mixture are digested prior to separation and tandem mass spectrometry Tandem mass spectrometry can produce a peptide sequence tag that can be used to identify a peptide in a protein database 61 62 63 A notation has been developed for indicating peptide fragments that arise from a tandem mass spectrum 64 Peptide fragment ions are indicated by a b or c if the charge is retained on the N terminus and by x y or z if the charge is maintained on the C terminus The subscript indicates the number of amino acid residues in the fragment Superscripts are sometimes used to indicate neutral losses in addition to the backbone fragmentation for loss of ammonia and for loss of water Although peptide backbone cleavage is the most useful for sequencing and peptide identification other fragment ions may be observed under high energy dissociation conditions These include the side chain loss ions d v w and ammonium ions 65 66 and additional sequence specific fragment ions associated with particular amino acid residues 67 Oligosaccharides edit Oligosaccharides may be sequenced using tandem mass spectrometry in a similar manner to peptide sequencing 68 Fragmentation generally occurs on either side of the glycosidic bond b c y and z ions but also under more energetic conditions through the sugar ring structure in a cross ring cleavage x ions Again trailing subscripts are used to indicate position of the cleavage along the chain For cross ring cleavage ions the nature of the cross ring cleavage is indicated by preceding superscripts 69 70 Oligonucleotides edit Tandem mass spectrometry has been applied to DNA and RNA sequencing 71 72 A notation for gas phase fragmentation of oligonucleotide ions has been proposed 73 Newborn screening edit Main article Newborn screening Newborn screening is the process of testing newborn babies for treatable genetic endocrinologic metabolic and hematologic diseases 74 75 The development of tandem mass spectrometry screening in the early 1990s led to a large expansion of potentially detectable congenital metabolic diseases that affect blood levels of organic acids 76 Limitation editTandem mass spectrometry cannot be applied for single cell analyses as it is insensitive to analyze such small amounts of a cell These limitations are primarily due to a combination of inefficient ion production and ion losses within the instruments due to chemical noise sources of solvents 77 Future outlook editTandem mass spectrometry will be a useful tool for protein characterization nucleoprotein complexes and other biological structures However some challenges left such as analyzing the characterization of the proteome quantitatively and qualitatively 78 See also editAccelerator mass spectrometry Cross section physics Mass analyzed ion kinetic energy spectrometry Unimolecular ion decompositionReferences edit IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology 2nd ed the Gold Book 1997 Online corrected version 2006 tandem mass spectrometer doi 10 1351 goldbook T06250 Cody RB Freiser BS 1982 Collision induced dissociation in a fourier transform mass spectrometer International 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November 2003 Use of tandem mass spectrometry for multianalyte screening of dried blood specimens from newborns Clinical Chemistry 49 11 1797 817 doi 10 1373 clinchem 2003 022178 PMID 14578311 Angel Thomas E Aryal Uma K Hengel Shawna M Baker Erin S Kelly Ryan T Robinson Errol W Smith Richard D 21 May 2012 Mass spectrometry based proteomics existing capabilities and future directions Chemical Society Reviews 41 10 3912 3928 doi 10 1039 c2cs15331a ISSN 0306 0012 PMC 3375054 PMID 22498958 Han Xuemei Aslanian Aaron Yates John R October 2008 Mass Spectrometry for Proteomics Current Opinion in Chemical Biology 12 5 483 490 doi 10 1016 j cbpa 2008 07 024 ISSN 1367 5931 PMC 2642903 PMID 18718552 Bibliography editMcLuckey SA Busch KL Glish GL 1988 Mass spectrometry mass spectrometry techniques and applications of tandem mass spectrometry New York N Y VCH Publishers ISBN 978 0 89573 275 0 McLuckey SA Glish GL 18 January 1989 Mass Spectrometry Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications of Tandem Chichester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 18699 1 McLafferty FW 1983 Tandem mass spectrometry New York Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 86597 1 Sherman NE Kinter M 2000 Protein sequencing and identification using tandem mass spectrometry New York John Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 32249 8 External links editAn Introduction to Mass Spectrometry by Dr Alison E Ashcroft Archived 8 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tandem mass spectrometry amp oldid 1187433038 Surface induced dissociation, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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